meketrefe
.450/400 Nitro Ex
you are not alone. A lot of people think the 22LR is some sort of toy round, but it is not.
I think if you hit some rib or small bone might actually help with letality since the impact in something hard
might make the bullet flatten and create a wider channel and if not the bullet the bone fragments themselves.
But it doesn't have to be a heart shot, the spine, any large vein or an artery and whether it is faster or not, the wound is
pretty lethal. It seems little energy but with that much grain and sectional density is a pretty serious thing and
nobody wants to be hit by it.
I think that is why the 22LR is such a great survival and all around caliber... cheap, small, plentiful, versatile, etc...
I can hit a pack of cigarrets pretty consistently from 175 to 220 rounds but beyond that
point the trajectory is quite erratic. It is like shooting long range with a 308 but worse because you do not have the ammo consistency nor the bullet is really design for that...
But doing up to 200 or even 300 yards with the 22LR and studying the wind and trajectories and making corrections like if it was a larger caliber is an easy and inexpensive way to learn and get better marksmanship skills, that is for sure.
At the end of the day the more you shoot and the more your go back and review trajectories and adjustments the more your learn and this is a cheap way to do it .
I think if you hit some rib or small bone might actually help with letality since the impact in something hard
might make the bullet flatten and create a wider channel and if not the bullet the bone fragments themselves.
But it doesn't have to be a heart shot, the spine, any large vein or an artery and whether it is faster or not, the wound is
pretty lethal. It seems little energy but with that much grain and sectional density is a pretty serious thing and
nobody wants to be hit by it.
I think that is why the 22LR is such a great survival and all around caliber... cheap, small, plentiful, versatile, etc...
I can hit a pack of cigarrets pretty consistently from 175 to 220 rounds but beyond that
point the trajectory is quite erratic. It is like shooting long range with a 308 but worse because you do not have the ammo consistency nor the bullet is really design for that...
But doing up to 200 or even 300 yards with the 22LR and studying the wind and trajectories and making corrections like if it was a larger caliber is an easy and inexpensive way to learn and get better marksmanship skills, that is for sure.
At the end of the day the more you shoot and the more your go back and review trajectories and adjustments the more your learn and this is a cheap way to do it .
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