can someone please explain to me why the 5.45 x 39 russian round has 2 distinctive wound cavities?
thanks
Are they just whining more than our boys do, or are they doing something significant;ly different? I don't remember reading anything similar from Canadian troops.
The discussion turns around the fragmentation of the bullet. While I agree with the importance of the fragmentation, the most important weakness of the 5.56 is not exposed: it’s very weak ability to induce shock trauma. Shock trauma is induced by the internal movement of organs while the bullet passes through. So say if a bullet hits the belly, the energy of a bullet has the possibility to make the heart and other organs to move and that will put the individual into shock and possibly kill the guy. During the ballistic test, that ability is usually measured by the amplitude through wich the gelatine moves. The more it moves, the more the bullet has the ability to induce shock.
The 5.56 does not move gelatine block alot. So if the bullet does not fragment (say 150m for a C7 or 50m for a M4), the 5.56 bullet becomes an hostile acupuncture therapy that has limited possibility to induce shock. While other bullets (7.62x39, 7.62N) might have more limited fragmentation than a point blank 5.56, they do induce higher energy into the target and have higher chances to create shock into the target. Hence the higher lethality of a 7.62.
I’ll bring to your attention that the drug argument, the guy survived because he was drugged, is very rare with a C6. Either drugged people in Afghanistan don’t get hit by C6 and only get hit by C7 or C9; or people survived the 5.56 because it is a weak bullet. I do remember at the beginning of my military career in the 90’s that we praised the 5.56 because it would not kill the soviet, it would injured him and forced 3+ people to take care of him... Contrairement à la guerre froide, in Afghanistan, we want to kill them and I am not too sure that the 5.56 is up to the challenge.
Avec respect,
S
The discussion turns around the fragmentation of the bullet. While I agree with the importance of the fragmentation, the most important weakness of the 5.56 is not exposed: it’s very weak ability to induce shock trauma. Shock trauma is induced by the internal movement of organs while the bullet passes through. So say if a bullet hits the belly, the energy of a bullet has the possibility to make the heart and other organs to move and that will put the individual into shock and possibly kill the guy. During the ballistic test, that ability is usually measured by the amplitude through wich the gelatine moves. The more it moves, the more the bullet has the ability to induce shock.
The 5.56 does not move gelatine block alot. So if the bullet does not fragment (say 150m for a C7 or 50m for a M4), the 5.56 bullet becomes an hostile acupuncture therapy that has limited possibility to induce shock. While other bullets (7.62x39, 7.62N) might have more limited fragmentation than a point blank 5.56, they do induce higher energy into the target and have higher chances to create shock into the target. Hence the higher lethality of a 7.62.
I’ll bring to your attention that the drug argument, the guy survived because he was drugged, is very rare with a C6. Either drugged people in Afghanistan don’t get hit by C6 and only get hit by C7 or C9; or people survived the 5.56 because it is a weak bullet. I do remember at the beginning of my military career in the 90’s that we praised the 5.56 because it would not kill the soviet, it would injured him and forced 3+ people to take care of him... Contrairement à la guerre froide, in Afghanistan, we want to kill them and I am not too sure that the 5.56 is up to the challenge.
Avec respect,
S
The discussion turns around the fragmentation of the bullet. While I agree with the importance of the fragmentation, the most important weakness of the 5.56 is not exposed: it’s very weak ability to induce shock trauma. Shock trauma is induced by the internal movement of organs while the bullet passes through. So say if a bullet hits the belly, the energy of a bullet has the possibility to make the heart and other organs to move and that will put the individual into shock and possibly kill the guy. During the ballistic test, that ability is usually measured by the amplitude through wich the gelatine moves. The more it moves, the more the bullet has the ability to induce shock.
The 5.56 does not move gelatine block alot. So if the bullet does not fragment (say 150m for a C7 or 50m for a M4), the 5.56 bullet becomes an hostile acupuncture therapy that has limited possibility to induce shock. While other bullets (7.62x39, 7.62N) might have more limited fragmentation than a point blank 5.56, they do induce higher energy into the target and have higher chances to create shock into the target. Hence the higher lethality of a 7.62.
I’ll bring to your attention that the drug argument, the guy survived because he was drugged, is very rare with a C6. Either drugged people in Afghanistan don’t get hit by C6 and only get hit by C7 or C9; or people survived the 5.56 because it is a weak bullet. I do remember at the beginning of my military career in the 90’s that we praised the 5.56 because it would not kill the soviet, it would injured him and forced 3+ people to take care of him... Contrairement à la guerre froide, in Afghanistan, we want to kill them and I am not too sure that the 5.56 is up to the challenge.
Avec respect,
S
....
Furthermore there was never any ammo ever adopted by any military that was designed to wound. Nor was there any thought to wounded requiring more care and removing combatants from the field. Let this myth die, please! First of all, if you are in the offense, you are caring for the wounded you pick up as you advance. Secondly, the wounding potential would only exist with the small arms ammo, there is no equivelant myth concerning artillery shells and explosives which have inflicted the large majority of casualties since WWI. Unless you are also suggesting that there is a special 155mm fragment designed to wound and not just remove large body parts?
I think that what sofduc means by "shock" is the actual transference of engery from the bullet to the target, NOT the size/type of wound cavity.
A heavier bullet will have more energy to transfer to the target than a lighter bullet impacting the target at the same speed, due to the weight of the bullet.
also location, location, location...
1) A bullet that passes thru and hits no vital organs
2) A bullet that stops inside the body, yet never reaches any vital organs
Go up and look at the bullet profiles I have posted above, and see which bullet you would rather use.
Worst case for the better rounds is at range they end up acting like a Warsaw pact bullet...
Hey sofduc,
I remember being told back in the day that the "Soviets could fire our ammo (7.62 x 51) out of there guns, but we can't fire our's out of their guns (7.62 x 39)."
Whatever, don't believe everything you were told by someone in the Army.
Rich
Some of us use real rifles in the real world. Do you have anything of value to bring to this thread?