Just up front, I will be the dumbest guy here with the least experience and knowledge. So, feel free to ignore my observations and my feelings will not be hurt and I know this is an old thread. I think it is still important because it is still being discussed.
There is a video by one of the guys at Federal Ammunition talking about hydrostatic shock and wound channels. That after you get past a certain velocity, you create a permanent wound channel.
And I notice that people shooting arrows at a fraction of bullet speeds kill deer and elk, and even moose, all the time. Even if the broadhead is so many grains, it would have done not enough if it glanced off the shoulder blade. With archery, you must absolutely hit the 'Vital Vee" explained by the Ranch Fairy on youtube. And that is shot placement,
I have seen Rob Arrington at deermeatfordinner bring down a canadian moose at distance with his Howa 1500 in 6.5 Creedmoor shooting Hornady 143 grain ELD-X.
I have seen Ron Spomer shoot an elk with his 7 mm Rem Mag and it took three shots to bring the beast down.
Someone I know harvested an Aoudad Sheep with a .300 Win Mag and he advocates hunting whitetail with a .300 Win Mag and thinks anyone shooting less than that is foolish.
All these different sizes, weights, and muzzle velocities. And the common element is shot placement. The better shot placement is, I think, the deciding factor. If it was hydrostatic shock alone, I could hunt whitetail with my M4A3 shooting 55 grain 5.56 at 3450 fps. Instead, I hunt whitetail with .308 Win and would consider it also good for mule deer, maybe elk, if my shot placement is good.
I think hydrostatic shock is a contributing factor but I am not so sure that it is creating the same damage as the actual impact of bullet and bullet fragments.
And I could be totally wrong. I am just going from what I have seen, more than theory. What bullet did what.
I also think the amount of work done by the bullet in the body is key. Just as Elmer Keith would say. If you get a bullet zipping through before having time to expand, you often lose a harvest.
There is a video by one of the guys at Federal Ammunition talking about hydrostatic shock and wound channels. That after you get past a certain velocity, you create a permanent wound channel.
And I notice that people shooting arrows at a fraction of bullet speeds kill deer and elk, and even moose, all the time. Even if the broadhead is so many grains, it would have done not enough if it glanced off the shoulder blade. With archery, you must absolutely hit the 'Vital Vee" explained by the Ranch Fairy on youtube. And that is shot placement,
I have seen Rob Arrington at deermeatfordinner bring down a canadian moose at distance with his Howa 1500 in 6.5 Creedmoor shooting Hornady 143 grain ELD-X.
I have seen Ron Spomer shoot an elk with his 7 mm Rem Mag and it took three shots to bring the beast down.
Someone I know harvested an Aoudad Sheep with a .300 Win Mag and he advocates hunting whitetail with a .300 Win Mag and thinks anyone shooting less than that is foolish.
All these different sizes, weights, and muzzle velocities. And the common element is shot placement. The better shot placement is, I think, the deciding factor. If it was hydrostatic shock alone, I could hunt whitetail with my M4A3 shooting 55 grain 5.56 at 3450 fps. Instead, I hunt whitetail with .308 Win and would consider it also good for mule deer, maybe elk, if my shot placement is good.
I think hydrostatic shock is a contributing factor but I am not so sure that it is creating the same damage as the actual impact of bullet and bullet fragments.
And I could be totally wrong. I am just going from what I have seen, more than theory. What bullet did what.
I also think the amount of work done by the bullet in the body is key. Just as Elmer Keith would say. If you get a bullet zipping through before having time to expand, you often lose a harvest.