I am pretty sure it will make a big hole.
So will my Johnson. (slider didn't get a whole lot of lines in that movie, had to go with his best one.)
Obviously the animal will be dead either way at 500 yards. At 1,200 I am pretty sure my Elk is dead, yours..... maybe but probably not.
That is the whole point, there is no one metric that means much by itself it is everything together. The higher the velocity and weight of a projectile (mmm I think that translates in energy) of the same bullet construction the higher the "killing energy". This really shouldn't be difficult to understand and accept. It is simple physics that should be learned in high school.
What is it that you think my argument is? I think either I'm not communicating it very clearly, or you're not reading it very carefully.
Are you saying you think a 1400 FPS impact with a 215 Berger hybrid is going to provide your desired wound? I'm really not trying to get into a fight here, really trying to understand what you think defines desired terminal performance.
I'm not saying we should ignore distance at all. I'm saying that knowing the energy number doesn't tell us anything useful until we know multiple other factors, and those factors can tell us in far more detail what kind of wound we can expect to see than any kind of "rule of thumb" we might be able to apply from knowing how much KE it's carrying.
BTW, my .243AI hits that 2050fps/1000 ft lb at just under 800 yards with a 108, a little over 800 with a 109 ELDM. I'm extremely comfortable with that bullet impacting at that speed. Would I be as comfortable shooting an elk (or even deer) with a same diameter, same weight Barnes X-bullet at that impact velocity (and therefore energy)? No, I would not be inclined to think I'd get the wound channel I want.
It's a little like this... Is 200 horsepower enough to tow a horse trailer? Is it enough to win a drag race against a Mustang? Depends on if we're talking about a 12v Cummins or a BMW liter bike. Or we could be talking about my old Land cruiser that I wouldn't tow a horse trailer or win a drag race with. By the time you have the info you need in order to make use of the HP number, you no longer need the HP number to answer the question.
Edit to add: of course I do believe that a 215 Berger at 2400 fps produces a bigger wound channel than a 108 Berger at same velocity. My argument is two main points -
1) 108 Berger in this example produces a more than adequate wound channel at appropriate impact velocity. Better than a 215 produces at velocity that would make for an equal KE. As KE of those two bullets gets closer to equal, terminal performance gets more disparate. KE is not a useful metric for terminal performance. There is no one metric (KE, diameter, momentum, velocity, weight, or bullet construction) that can provide a good picture, and lots of combinations of two don't either. If I had to pick two, it would be bullet construction and impact velocity.
2) not addressed at all in my previous post, but talked about earlier in the thread... If we can get desired wound channel from a platform that everyone shoots better, why not optimize for shootability? We all do that already, it's why almost no one shoots Florida whitetails with a .408 CheyTac. Killing is about putting a sufficient wound channel in the correct location, and almost all the rodeos I've seen have resulted from failure on the "correct location" part, rarely on the "sufficient wound channel" part. I see a .300WM a lot like a 450cc dirt bike. 98% of guys using them would get down the trail faster and with fewer problems on a 250. I think 98% of guys shooting braked .300WM rifles would be better killers at all ranges with a suppressed 6.5CM or 6CM. I say that as a former die hard 7mmRM/180 Berger hybrid guy.
Sorry for the long edit, I just was rereading and seeing that there's a fair bit that I don't think I expressed very well.