I used the estimated wound volumes from the most recent version of the published FBI wound statistics I could download in softcopy form.
I averaged all the estimated wound volume figures for each caliber providing an average estimated wound volume figure for each caliber.
I computed the weight of the damaged tissue for each average estimated wound volume figure using the average density of human tissue.
Then I computed those weights as a percent of the total weight of a human being using the average weight of an adult human male in the United States.
I then rounded the numbers to the nearest tenth of a percent.
Here are the numbers for some common handgun self-defense calibers.
9mm--> 0.1%
.357SIG--> 0.1%
.40S&W--> 0.1%
.45ACP--> 0.1%
10mm--> 0.1%
.357Mag-->0.1%
Yeah, that's right. You have to round to hundredths of a percent of total weight before you get any differences.
Which means, among other things, that a handgun bullet from any of the common self-defense calibers listed above will, on average, leave a human 99.9% intact.
I averaged all the estimated wound volume figures for each caliber providing an average estimated wound volume figure for each caliber.
I computed the weight of the damaged tissue for each average estimated wound volume figure using the average density of human tissue.
Then I computed those weights as a percent of the total weight of a human being using the average weight of an adult human male in the United States.
I then rounded the numbers to the nearest tenth of a percent.
Here are the numbers for some common handgun self-defense calibers.
9mm--> 0.1%
.357SIG--> 0.1%
.40S&W--> 0.1%
.45ACP--> 0.1%
10mm--> 0.1%
.357Mag-->0.1%
Yeah, that's right. You have to round to hundredths of a percent of total weight before you get any differences.
Which means, among other things, that a handgun bullet from any of the common self-defense calibers listed above will, on average, leave a human 99.9% intact.