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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Pass through or Expended in Target?
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<blockquote data-quote="Tulsa Reiner" data-source="post: 2419138" data-attributes="member: 75815"><p>To your comment that in former times, the thought was that "a bullet that remained in the animal had expended all it's energy in the animal," I would say that should be corrected to say "the bullet that remains in the animal expended the LAST of its energy in the animal." The bullet that exits has greater energy when it enters, and thus makes it all the way through. We know that bullets do most of their damage by the hydralic shock around the bullet, not just by the size of the diameter, whether it maintains its original shape, or mushrooms.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tulsa Reiner, post: 2419138, member: 75815"] To your comment that in former times, the thought was that "a bullet that remained in the animal had expended all it's energy in the animal," I would say that should be corrected to say "the bullet that remains in the animal expended the LAST of its energy in the animal." The bullet that exits has greater energy when it enters, and thus makes it all the way through. We know that bullets do most of their damage by the hydralic shock around the bullet, not just by the size of the diameter, whether it maintains its original shape, or mushrooms. [/QUOTE]
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Pass through or Expended in Target?
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