It's a bad analogy. In the one case you care nothing about affecting the whole unit--the mountain.Just as you don't need to destroy much of a mountain to blast a tunnel throgh it, you don't need to destroy much of man's tissue to incapacitate him. But dividing the volumes by the total volume of a man (or the amount of rock displace by the total mass of the mountain) obscures the significant differences between the various calibers/loads (or explosive agents)
In the other case ALL you care about is affecting the whole unit--the attacker.
Since that is the case, it's relevant to point out just how much damage you can actually expect do to an attacker as a whole. It's very important for a person to realize that simply randomly damaging an attacker with a bullet is pointless in terms of achieving incapacitation--regardless of which of the calibers listed they choose.
And, as a consequence of realizing how small an amount of overall tissue is damaged, it becomes apparent that differences in terminal performance shouldn't be considered as the most important factor in caliber selection. Because no matter which caliber you select, on average, you're still only going to be damaging a fraction of a percentage point of the attacker.
It is precisely because there is so much of a person that can be damaged without resulting in incapacitation that it's important to understand how little damage a bullet does.No, not at all. When you're trying to incapacitate an attacker, the fact that you're not damaging *all* of the tissue in their arms and legs isn't relevant. The weight contained in the arms and legs adds to the total mass of the man, but doesn't really affect the efficacy of gunshot wounds (torso wounds, at least.)
It's not uncommon to hear people making claims about how even a peripheral hit with "insert favorite caliber here" will automatically end a fight. Next time someone says that to you, instead of just saying it's not true, you'll have some data to show him.
First of all, it's hardly accurate to claim that the process of "averaging" is "my mathematical process". It was around centuries before I was born.Do you deny that your mathematical process completely obscures the variance of almost 300% in the FBI's wound volume measurements?
Second, the wound volume figures from the FBI are actually averages calculated from the many rounds they fired with each loading they tested. So you could say the same thing about their figures. They're hiding information by only providing averages instead of giving you a penetration measurement for each and every round fired.
Third, I said clearly that the figures were on the internet, so it's a real stretch to imply that I was hiding anything.
I downloaded them some time ago and once I had them there was no point in keeping a link.But nowhere in your initial post (or in post #46 that I could see) did you actually STATE those volumes (or even link to them).
As far as posting them, the data contains measurements from 80 something loads with two wound volume figures for each. Posting them is hardly feasible.
Finally, no one (including you) asked for the data set.
I take it that since your other arguments have been answered that now that you're now taking a different approach?Your math is correct - no one is arguing that.