Golovkin
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2018
- Messages
- 84
WAY too much speculation going on here without a proper autopsy. "Shoulder shot" leaves a few questions. What part of the shoulder, scapula, humeras, olecranon? the joint? did it also catch a rib or sternum? Was it a perpendicular hit, or glancing? did it deflect out of the chest cavity?
Its hard to remember the exact angles that were presented the millisecond a bullet hits. when you recreate the memory in your head its easy for the mind to present a much more simple 2D broadside image, its also easier for us the audience to imagine this 6.5 partition hitting squarely, but the reality is that there were side angles, and an up or down angle, and who knows what part of the shoulder bone was hit.
But speculation is all good fun, so long as we understand that it is just speculation.
My guess is there was a deflection sending the bullet out of the chest cavity, or the bullet mushroomed very large and under-penetrated after hitting multiple bones. I have a hard time imagining that the creedmore sends a 140gr. bullet into destruction mode at 300 some yards... that tip didn't come off at that speed, I've recovered a half dozen partitions and they need to hit a big bone at point blank to shed the tip. A creeedmore won't do it at 300+yds.
Regardless, of the autopsy results, that caliber calls for a shot placement further back into the ribs and up into the double lung area. Its an easier target, than the pocket anyhow.
Cheers
Its hard to remember the exact angles that were presented the millisecond a bullet hits. when you recreate the memory in your head its easy for the mind to present a much more simple 2D broadside image, its also easier for us the audience to imagine this 6.5 partition hitting squarely, but the reality is that there were side angles, and an up or down angle, and who knows what part of the shoulder bone was hit.
But speculation is all good fun, so long as we understand that it is just speculation.
My guess is there was a deflection sending the bullet out of the chest cavity, or the bullet mushroomed very large and under-penetrated after hitting multiple bones. I have a hard time imagining that the creedmore sends a 140gr. bullet into destruction mode at 300 some yards... that tip didn't come off at that speed, I've recovered a half dozen partitions and they need to hit a big bone at point blank to shed the tip. A creeedmore won't do it at 300+yds.
Regardless, of the autopsy results, that caliber calls for a shot placement further back into the ribs and up into the double lung area. Its an easier target, than the pocket anyhow.
Cheers