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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Larger diameter bullets allow more room for error?
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<blockquote data-quote="swarbt119" data-source="post: 1537432" data-attributes="member: 86339"><p>I believe the thinking behind this has less to do with bullet performance and more to do with bullet diameter. I shot 3D archery for many years and a ton of guys shot extremely fat arrows, they call them line cutters. The reason being on an imperfect shot the diameter of the hole is larger and may still nick a vital as opposed to a clean miss. I'm not sure if it translates to guns with today's bullets, but I think that's probably the direction of that argument.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="swarbt119, post: 1537432, member: 86339"] I believe the thinking behind this has less to do with bullet performance and more to do with bullet diameter. I shot 3D archery for many years and a ton of guys shot extremely fat arrows, they call them line cutters. The reason being on an imperfect shot the diameter of the hole is larger and may still nick a vital as opposed to a clean miss. I'm not sure if it translates to guns with today's bullets, but I think that's probably the direction of that argument. [/QUOTE]
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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Larger diameter bullets allow more room for error?
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