Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: high country on October 16, 2012, 09:21:39 PMAm I the only one who finds it interesting that a bullet was recovered with such little damage? I suspect serious yawing, lack of stabilization or else there is more to the story. Did the entrance look like a keyhole?I agree with this. The fact that they were recovered is very telling. TSX that mushroom typically are pass throughs. 5 animals taken with them in our family, one recovered on the far side of an elk. In all cases devastation lay in their wake. Just for comparison's sake, I had an accubomb pencil through a whitetail's chest from 150 yards. 400 yards of tracking later we found it. Two .277 holes.I decided to trade up to the Barnes. TSX like to go fast, and not have their noses damaged prior to impact.For two to be recovered looking like that there is WAY more to this.Wsmnut
Am I the only one who finds it interesting that a bullet was recovered with such little damage? I suspect serious yawing, lack of stabilization or else there is more to the story. Did the entrance look like a keyhole?
your guys pet names for eachother is so cute! I have yet to recover a TTSX, they always go all the way through and leave a huge hole. They make a mess out of antelope. wish I took more pics! One doe I took at 305yds was facing me at a little angle, it went in the chest, came out behind the ribs and took all the guts out with it, bullet did all the work for me.
I have killed 2 animals with accubonds. One was a bear that I shot in the head at 20 yards and did not recover the bullet. The other was an elk at about 50 yards and the bullet completely exploded. It was a broadside shot that destroyed both lungs, but the bullet definitely exploded. No exit and no bullet in the critter. Does that mean accubonds suck? Apparently not if you ask most everyone else.
I've had similar results in a 7mag with 160's. Pencil holes. Not a fan. I agree on accubonds.