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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Specialty Handgun Hunting
S&W 460V trail gun
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<blockquote data-quote="memtb" data-source="post: 2862544" data-attributes="member: 75451"><p>The one thing that I have against the LeHigh Penetrators is the shape!</p><p></p><p> Yee, they penetrate like "no tomorrow"…..but do minimal damage, other than a long wound channel! There is a very small permanent wound channel, and minimal shock transference (hydraulic, ect.)</p><p></p><p> A wide, flat nose (wide metplat) transfers more energy to the animal, has greater permanent tissue disruption, and will also penetrate deeply into large animals!</p><p></p><p> Think about what you learned in Basic First Aid…..a puncture wound will bleed very little, as there is generally minimal tissue damage…..just large enough for the sharp (pointed) object to pass through the tissue, with the tissue quickly returning nearly back to pre penetration state! JMO memtb</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="memtb, post: 2862544, member: 75451"] The one thing that I have against the LeHigh Penetrators is the shape! Yee, they penetrate like “no tomorrow“…..but do minimal damage, other than a long wound channel! There is a very small permanent wound channel, and minimal shock transference (hydraulic, ect.) A wide, flat nose (wide metplat) transfers more energy to the animal, has greater permanent tissue disruption, and will also penetrate deeply into large animals! Think about what you learned in Basic First Aid…..a puncture wound will bleed very little, as there is generally minimal tissue damage…..just large enough for the sharp (pointed) object to pass through the tissue, with the tissue quickly returning nearly back to pre penetration state! JMO memtb [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Specialty Handgun Hunting
S&W 460V trail gun
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