... on the idea that hunting with FMJ is inhumane. I'll tell you why, but before I do let me say this: It's illegal in some places to hunt with FMJ bullets, I already know this. It's not everywhere, like Virginia (.23 caliber or larger with 350lbs-ft. ME) so please keep your lawyers in their holsters.
1) A "hunting" bullet expands and makes a bigger hole. Yeah, they expand a bit, but not nearly enough to create that much more significant a wound passage. When you're talking about a hole, is there much difference between .30" and 0.45" if you missed the vitals anyway?
2) A "hunting" bullet won't pass through the animal like a FMJ will. Definitely BS. I don't even hunt anything but varmints, but the hunters that I socialize with (and there are a lot of deer hunters here in Virginia!) all commonly report complete entry/exit wounds. In fact, my wife's cousin shot her first deer last year, with a 243Win, and she got entry-exit pattern.
3) A "hunting" bullet does more damage, killing the animal quickly. If this was true, you wouldn't hear constant reports about having to track or losing an animal after its been hit. In fact, there is reason to believe that FMJ does more damage, because it will bounce around the body when it hits bone, or turn sideways upon entry, causing a wound channel as wide as it is long.
Out of all the photos I've seen and ballistic tests I've looked at, there is nothing that makes me believe that anything is more important than shot placement. If you hit a game animal in the right place, it's going to die, period. If you don't, it's going to walk away no matter how much money you spent on your ammo.
Discuss. If you have pictures, statistics, ballistic analyses, or other objective evidence to present, please share it! The above argument makes sense to me based on my understanding of physics and common sense, but I am willing to be persuaded with evidence.
EDIT: Mods, If this belongs in the hunting forum, please move it!
1) A "hunting" bullet expands and makes a bigger hole. Yeah, they expand a bit, but not nearly enough to create that much more significant a wound passage. When you're talking about a hole, is there much difference between .30" and 0.45" if you missed the vitals anyway?
2) A "hunting" bullet won't pass through the animal like a FMJ will. Definitely BS. I don't even hunt anything but varmints, but the hunters that I socialize with (and there are a lot of deer hunters here in Virginia!) all commonly report complete entry/exit wounds. In fact, my wife's cousin shot her first deer last year, with a 243Win, and she got entry-exit pattern.
3) A "hunting" bullet does more damage, killing the animal quickly. If this was true, you wouldn't hear constant reports about having to track or losing an animal after its been hit. In fact, there is reason to believe that FMJ does more damage, because it will bounce around the body when it hits bone, or turn sideways upon entry, causing a wound channel as wide as it is long.
Out of all the photos I've seen and ballistic tests I've looked at, there is nothing that makes me believe that anything is more important than shot placement. If you hit a game animal in the right place, it's going to die, period. If you don't, it's going to walk away no matter how much money you spent on your ammo.
Discuss. If you have pictures, statistics, ballistic analyses, or other objective evidence to present, please share it! The above argument makes sense to me based on my understanding of physics and common sense, but I am willing to be persuaded with evidence.
EDIT: Mods, If this belongs in the hunting forum, please move it!
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