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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Nosler long range accbond and my experience.
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<blockquote data-quote="WildRose" data-source="post: 887286" data-attributes="member: 30902"><p>The ideal is to have the bullet do just that, mushroom out AND get full penetration.</p><p></p><p>I looked again at the pictures and the video. It looks to me like the frontal shoulder to the HQ shot may have not struck any bone at all along it's path, is that correct?</p><p></p><p>It still looks to me like you got great performance with the bullets but managed to get the first two "on target" while still missing any of the vital structures necessary to ensure that DRT kill we desire. That's just bad luck, not a bullet problem from the way I see it.</p><p></p><p>Personally The kind of expansion you got on the one you recovered is exactly what I like to see.</p><p></p><p>It just goes back to what several of us said throughout this thread.</p><p></p><p>Break the shoulders. </p><p></p><p>Punch the spine.</p><p></p><p>Take out the heart.</p><p></p><p>Take out the blood vessels at the top of the heart and punch the lungs.</p><p></p><p>Take out the Aorta or Vena Cava.</p><p></p><p>Punch the lungs.</p><p></p><p>Punch the liver.</p><p></p><p>Take out the Aorta or Vena Cava.</p><p></p><p>Those are all fatal first round wounds, but even the latter three are going to result in the animal often running a good long ways before finally going down.</p><p></p><p>I've seen Antelope run a quarter or half mile acting totally unhurt with those types of wound and then just collapse and seen hogs hit much better with total disruption of everything in their chest run just as far.</p><p></p><p>Sometimes it just happens.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WildRose, post: 887286, member: 30902"] The ideal is to have the bullet do just that, mushroom out AND get full penetration. I looked again at the pictures and the video. It looks to me like the frontal shoulder to the HQ shot may have not struck any bone at all along it's path, is that correct? It still looks to me like you got great performance with the bullets but managed to get the first two "on target" while still missing any of the vital structures necessary to ensure that DRT kill we desire. That's just bad luck, not a bullet problem from the way I see it. Personally The kind of expansion you got on the one you recovered is exactly what I like to see. It just goes back to what several of us said throughout this thread. Break the shoulders. Punch the spine. Take out the heart. Take out the blood vessels at the top of the heart and punch the lungs. Take out the Aorta or Vena Cava. Punch the lungs. Punch the liver. Take out the Aorta or Vena Cava. Those are all fatal first round wounds, but even the latter three are going to result in the animal often running a good long ways before finally going down. I've seen Antelope run a quarter or half mile acting totally unhurt with those types of wound and then just collapse and seen hogs hit much better with total disruption of everything in their chest run just as far. Sometimes it just happens. [/QUOTE]
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Nosler long range accbond and my experience.
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