memtb
Well-Known Member
and you never hear about how many shots needed or how many ran off and died somewhere else and never recovered. thank god most hunters are better educated now.
As a whole……are we? memtb
and you never hear about how many shots needed or how many ran off and died somewhere else and never recovered. thank god most hunters are better educated now.
Amen to that!and you never hear about how many shots needed or how many ran off and died somewhere else and never recovered. thank god most hunters are better educated now.
I am just curious, what do you thnk goes into consideration when a manufacturer makes a recommendation?I like big holes (.30 cal or larger) on big game placed properly. I follow the bullet manufacture's suggested minimum impact velocities. I seem to have full freezers post-hunting season using this method.
Energy is a side metric for me that doesn't influence me all that much. Everything above trumps an energy stat.
I am just curious, what do you thnk goes into consideration when a manufacturer makes a recommendation?
My most modern cartridge is the 300AAC subsonic suppressed for fun and a Lapua. Everything else's is 60 years oldIt seems that anymore, it requires a catchy acronym such as PRC, or a name that takes you back into shooting history….aka Creedmore!
It's mostly advertising! memtb
Manufacture's certainly do physics calculations to derive their recommendations. They also physically test their bullets. Cool.I am just curious, what do you thnk goes into consideration when a manufacturer makes a recommendation?
It's all about placement. LL! Perhaps the buck had internal damage/bleeding and died elsewhere.Hit that North Dakota Buck with a nearly 2,288,000 grain slug ( 1997 GMC K-2500 Suburban ), that was traveling around 110FPS (75mph). A guy would think 61,468 ft lbs of energy would a stopped him, nope, not even a decent blood trail.