Tgace said:
Not quite entirely true in the case of HP rounds. HP are not truly designed to fragment. They expand to allow more energy transfer, more for creating larger wound channels (temporary cavity) than "knock down" power. Otherwise bullets would just be like high velocity ice picks. "Energy Dump" and temporary would cavities are important, when the proper body part is struck. i.e. the torso. The limbs and "****" arent composed of enough fluid to take advantage of the phenomena.
Actually, I was not attempting to imply that HP rounds fragment (although all bullets do to an extent), so I apologize for any ambiguity. The velocity becomes more of a factor, in terms of causing damage, for rifle rounds. Which is implied in your vet data. This is because below about 3,000 fps (as I stated earlier) the temporary cavity is irrelevant to tissue damage - it simply is not large enough and leads to no permanent damage upon reversal. My comment about being shot in the **** was about precisely the fact that it matters where you shoot not on some mystical 'stopping power' of a bullet due to "kinetic energy dump". Having the bullet stop in the target is desirable because it is more efficient (you are not sustaining greater recoil than you need to OR the energy that would otherwise carry the bullet through the target is being used to do something more useful, such as expand it or send fragments out from it into surrounding tissue) and of course you are not going to hit something your target obscures which you never intended to hit. This latter is trivial, for the most part, though. Why? Because unless you have a
seriously over powered round most of its energy is already spent and it probably will not even penetrate. Also, it is quite likely it fragments on exit, as a result of the sudden lack of constraining tissue (pressure) - i.e. it explodes on exit.
Handgun rounds are simply not fired with enough total energy to fall into either category. If you shoot someone with a handgun round which is at 3,000 fps, it would have to be a tiny projectile and would probably expend the majority of its energy deforming and fragmenting, effectively with zero penetration. E.g. Fackler's comment on Glaser rounds and peritonitis. The alternative is a round which is slow but very heavy. Ignoring range for a moment, what tends to happen here is that momentary surface pressue at the target is high enough to prevent penetration and all the energy is dissipated either flattening the round or simply being transmitted to the rest of the body. As I discussed earlier, the total amount of energy in a bullet is small, in reality; i.e. you get hit by a small 'baseball' - it'll sting, but that's about it.
This is why proper load for a calibre is a balancing act requiring that you determine what kind of scenario it is to be used in. Military often need more penetration than LEOs and other civilians because they often face scenarios where hard cover and body armour are factors - this tends to lead to them requiring higher overall power at the cost of accepting larger guns and more recoil. Or simply accepting (as they do) that handguns are not appropriate for engaging such targets, as a rule. I shift heavily towards the military side-arm view (it's a background thing) and favour large guns with high-power large calibre round optimized for penetration. This is my personal choice and I don't advocate it as a universal solution; in a house this may be very inappropriate as it is entirely possible for such a round to penetrate light walls, doors or furniture and strike a target you do not want to strike. Sometimes with as much as 75% of the energy remaining (gypsum is no barrier at all as far as a high-power bullet is concerned, whereas bone and muscle are).
Anyway... back onto JHP - Jacketed Hollow Point is a compromise design. It is meant to allow expansion but guarantee penetration to a minimum level. It does this nicely in such rounds as the FBI type 147 grain JHP 9mm. This round penetrates about 12" I believe, in bare gelatin. As much as 15" in 'clothed' gelatin. It expands more in the former, as I understand it (hence the reduced penetration) but would of course have produced 'a bigger hole' which is the point. In the latter expansion is sacrificed but good penetration is achieved. Ironically, this would seem to suggest that your are better being naked if you have to face down the FBI ;¬)
All of this backs up what I said about "Hydro-Static Shock" being total nonsense. If you want I can even find some references, from neuro-surgeons, on the matter. 'Energy Dump' as popularly understood is also a myth. There is as much energy dump from a baseball hit as there is in a .45 ACP round, as I observed earlier; there is
far more in a solid punch and a good kick from a MA is about the same energy as a very high-powered hunting round. That's why it breaks bones and achieves 'one hit drops' sometimes. A solid punch to the correct target will do so too - e.g. chin, because of the energy being used to bruise the brain (the only good way to incapacitate someone instantly other than breaking the spine).
Well, enough ramble.. kind of losing my thread now...
John