22LR Aguila 60gr Sniper Subsonic impacting ballistic gelatin (42,000 frames/sec)!
Uploader Comments (BrassFetcher)
All Comments (56)
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@RogePucela When most people refer to tumble, they mean prior to entering the target. If you see oblong holes in paper, the bullet tumbled.
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You all miss the point. It did tumble upon entry but it dumped all it's energy into the medium instead of passing through. This is a sucessful round.
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@BrassFetcher interesting, so...faster twist rate = more stable projectile at higher velocity = fragmentation/greater lethality also? right?
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.204 Ruger FMJ anybody?
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great to see a bullet tumbling and then to read people saying it didn't tumble... what were you looking at?
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@HistoryHmoobGuy Plus I just read your original comment "Tumbling is a bullet that flips as it travels" in air? Do you understand how inaccurate that would be? Honestly do you even OWN a gun?
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@HistoryHmoobGuy You are dumb. The there is no denying the .223 tumbles it is the crown and glory of the round. Do you know what gives the round it's stability? Speed. That's why whenever the bullet hits flesh it tumbles. Flesh is thicker than air thus causing it to flip over or tumble. You cannot deny that it tumbled that is like denying 2+2=4. Honestly I can't tell if you are trolling or just stupid look at 00:15
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@Chillsies Agree. It does tumble. Look at 0:15 and pause. it changes direction because it flips. Was HHG just trying to get more hits for the video? Because otherwise he's a tool.
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@Squishysforbreakfast dont get me wrong a 17HMR works great for critters, and fox... a coyote if you can place a good shot, headshot, vitals at closer ranges, but if the yote is 50+ yards out and its been wet, and the yotes fur is wet, more highly than not since the pelt is denser due to the fur being wet, you will either get no penetration, or very little causing injury to the yote rather than humanely putting it down
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@Squishysforbreakfast those are completely different than a .22LR they have higher velocities but the grain weight of the bullet is ALOT less... if your looking for a cheap alternative but GREAT small cal., go with the new 17 Hornet from hornady, heavier bullet, but uses the same casing design as its older counterpart the 22Hornet, the just angled the neck on the casing more at about 25 degrees, and has more ass to it than a .17HMR will also work for coyotes as well
But if you don't click on the ads ... we can't buy more gelatin! :)
BrassFetcher 3 months ago 20
That depends on whether or not you want to hurt the target ...
Slower twist rate = less stable projectile = earlier tumbling/greater lethality.
BrassFetcher 5 months ago 5