First, I understand that all the math in the world is to ballistics as benchracing is to the drag strip, but I feel it has some merit for gaining general starting points and such. So lets not get carried away.
I believe that many have a general acceptance of the Taylor Knock Out (TKO)rating for hunting performance, if only limited.
If I understand correctly, the rating is derived by:
[(velocity) * (bullet weight) * (caliber)] / 7000
Taking 25ACP load data from a book, the TKO for a 50gr .25 cal bullet at 700fps would yeild a TKO of:
[700 * 50 * 0.25] / 7000 = 1.25
Doing the same for 38spl, with a 140gr @ 500fps, yields:
[500 * 140 * 0.357] / 7000 = 3.57
So in general, one would assume the light 38spl loading would be superior to the hot 25ACP loading, for game. Makes sense and does not contradict common sense, bullet construction aside.
Now, I have a kick-ass slingshot that I generally use for paintballs. But I've been testing some ballistics with it (see "Getting the Most from your Chrony" available at Bookstores soon )
I can carry a 15gr .25cal steel BB to 250fps. I can take a 250gr lead bullet to 180fps. This means TKOs of 0.13 and 2.89 respectively (assuming the minimum diameter for a hit with the lead bullet).
Now, judging from the way grackles just laugh at you when you body-shoot them with the BBs, and judging from the effect of these two types of ammo on wooden fences, plastic buckets, beer cans and bricks, it is obvious that the bullet would be much better on game than the BB.
But carrying it a step farther, would the slingshot do better than the 25ACP on game? Forgetting again bullet construction, trajectory and range of course.
What are the general limitations of the TKO rating? Where does it fall apart? Or is this reasonable? Sounds freaky to me, but then again, I have yet to hit any game with the big ol bullet.
Karl.
[This message has been edited by Karl (edited 02-10-2002).]
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Ray Atkinson
Your BB "load" has 2 ft-lbs of kinetic energy. The lead bullet "load" has 18 ft-lbs. It "absorbs" more of the available energy of the slingshot and probably arrives with more remaining. It probably doesn't penetrate as well against skin, being larger and somewhat slower but the blunt trauma would be more severe with 9 times the KE. Why not shoot both of them into a block of modeling clay and report to us the "wound" channel created?
Its not like I'm going after coyotes or whatever. Just playing around. Maybe I can also see how easiliy it knocks a playdo block over?
As for its usefulness, I did not know that about the TKO. I had seen taffin use it to claim a 45LC would equal a 44mag in some applications. I assumed it was okay to universally apply it, within set windows of application.
A cast 45 Colt is an awsome killer of big game at close range...I prefer it to the 44 Magnum, but there isn't a lot of difference..My good friend Ross Seyfried, who has shot a lot of big game with both prefers the 45 Colt..
My experience is very limited to about 2 deer with the Colt and 3 with the 44 Mag, and one with a 41 Mag, not a lot of difference in any of them that I could see, other than I got a better blood trails with the Colt, but 2 deer proves little.
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Ray Atkinson
I was curious if the same principles of using TKO could be generally applied to most any projectile or if it has limitations. My example was in the extreme, I'm not ready to go hog hunting with a slingshot
There are probably no simple mathematical relationships, or maybe none at all, that describe "killing power" or "stopping power" over an unreasonably wide range of input values. When you have simple relationships, you have formulas that show a tennis ball having SOME stopping power. But it doesn't, at least not at real-life velocities. Not a little, not VERY little, but none at all. Yet that's not what your calculation shows.
So much for simple answers.