Two weeks earlier, it took my other hunting buddy 3 shots (2 pass through lung area and 1 through front left shoulder) using factory 180 Barnes TTSX.
BTW, all the shotes were under 100 yards.
Exactly. It is the tissue damage that does the work. Bullets from a shoulder fired gun do not have the physical ability to knock down or push over a big game animal. As in knock them off their feet. If they expire very rapidly and have a muscle twitch at the same time it gives the appearance that they were lifted off their feet. It was not the bullet making the animal airborne, it is not physically possible. Many variables at play in how quickly an animal expires. Only if the cns is interrupted on impact to they drop to the shot. Otherwise they need to bleed out to shut down the cns. Unless spine is hit this usually takes a few seconds and if an animal is in the flight mode they will cover a 100y in 5 seconds. A five second death is great bullet performance. A hunter has to remember that an animal can run really far in a very short amount of time. Sometimes animals hit with big bullets show zero sign of being hit as if they did not even feel it, with soup for lungs. They walk a little ways and tip over.
Hunters should never assume they have knock down power and always assume that they hit their target.
Steve
Exactly! This was my buddies first time elk hunting and used to hunting on stand with average shots of 50 yards in GA.
We told him to keep shooting until the bull elk drops. gun)