OntarioHunter
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2020
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A bullet that expands on impact and/or comes apart will leave a larger "wound channel" and therefore more tissue damage. Greater trauma = more bleeding = quicker death. I have seen the same size exit wound and same placement in different animals produce three times the bloodshot. It depends on bullet construction, size of animal, and velocity on impact (i.e. gas in the load and range to target).This is actually incorrect. A bullet kills by creating a wound channel that causes either damage to the nervous system or rapid loss of blood leading to CNS shutdown/hypovolemic shock.
I don't think exit wound is terribly important. But then I typically hunt big game when there's snow on the ground. The only animals during nearly sixty years hunting that went further than fifty yards (raghorn elk, bull moose, kudu) were poorly hit. The rest succumbed fairly quickly to 165, 180 (most), or 190 gr 30-06 cup and core lead. As often as not there was no exit wound in the large animals that dropped quickly. The largest animal, a Cape buffalo bull, was shot with a mere 250 gr 375 Barnes TSX and though it required a follow up, that bull was pretty much dead on his feet after a hundred yards. Shot in the boiler room behind right shoulder quartering away on the run. No exit. The bullet was lodged inside the ribs behind opposite shoulder. Even at just 60 yards, cup and core WOULD NOT have been sufficient in that situation. Not 250 gr anyway. First buffalo three years ago required only one of those bullets front on at 110 yards. It went twenty yards and tipped over. No exit.