Hydrostatic shock, temporoary wound cavity, etc. are BS. The only wounding factor from a bullet is the tissue it contacts and destroys directly.
Another one of those fellows who denies the existence of a factor because it's hard to measure.
In rifle ballistics, the temporary cavity stretches tissue beyond it's ability to recover and tears blood vessels. It's possibly the most important factor in incapacitation where rifles are concerned. If it didn't exist, the diameter of the bullet would be less than most pistol calibers, and the actual tissue destroyed would make the round no more effective than pistol rounds.
However, when we talk about pistols, the stretch cavity is not reliable with re: to incapacitation. We all know that. But to say rifle stretch cavities produce a high level of incapacitation and pistols produce zero is a little silly. Some people are incapacitated instantly without damage to the CS or blood pressure. What's the factor that produced that?
And don't say wimp factor or psychological surrender, since some who have been so instantly incapacitated were not wimps--- as demonstrated by Chuck Karwan. Some punches to the body of experienced marshal artists did the trick. Right now. Some did not.
Summary: There are factors at work we don't understand, and we can't measure them. A little silly to deny their existence. Also silly to suggest that pistol rounds can RELIABLY incapacitate without major damage to CS or hemastasis.
Oh, one more thing to get back on track:
Even with my mathematical deficiencies (I struggled through Algebra) I can figure out that a .45 ACP bullet with twice the surface area of a 9mm has a better chance of hitting a major blood vessel.
OK, IF the 9mm hit the same place and ruptured the same vessel, then the results would likely be the same. Gotta give ya that. LOL.
But to measure the amount of "body area left in tact"--- ok, you got me laughing again.
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