As mentioned, use a JSP bullet rather than a hollow point pistol bullet.
Since with the 44 you are making a hole 50% larger than 7mm to start with, expansion isn't necessary.
Definition off the net.
In classical mechanics, linear momentum or translational momentum (pl. momenta; SI unit kg m/s, or equivalently, N s) is the product of the mass and velocity of an object.
I would say that looks like foot/pounds of energy. A factor that is commonly used to "evaluate" a rounds "power".
When a well made .308 cal. bullet from a .308 win. hits a deer it will take awhile to become the diameter that a .44 cal slug starts out at. But I reckon a .44 magnum is not a superior round over a .308 win.
Definition off the net.
In classical mechanics, linear momentum or translational momentum (pl. momenta; SI unit kg m/s, or equivalently, N s) is the product of the mass and velocity of an object.
I would say that looks like foot/pounds of energy. A factor that is commonly used to "evaluate" a rounds "power".
When a well made .308 cal. bullet from a .308 win. hits a deer it will take awhile to become the diameter that a .44 cal slug starts out at. But I reckon a .44 magnum is not a superior round over a .308 win.
Can you explain that a bit more?
momentum is a product of mass and velocity
ft/sec (foot pounds) is a product of mass and velocity
but they are different?
Can you explain that a bit more?
momentum is a product of mass and velocity
ft/sec (foot pounds) is a product of mass and velocity
but they are different?
The hide and ribs of a moose could deflect a .44 bullet and leave you with a wounded animal.
All I was trying to do was explain why the units are so misleading. People see foot lbs and figure the math should somehow employ weight and length. You are welcome to elaborate but in your elaboration you got a number of things wrong.I'm not sure "Lever38" is going to help you with his description... so in layman's terms; For kinetic energy expressed in foot pounds (ingnore the above for a moment) the velocity factor is squared... as I said;
KE (ft/lb) =
Velocity X Velocity X Mass
-----------------------------
450,240
Momentum = Velocity X Mass
The conversion factor for momentum will depend on the units of measurement you choose to express it in... suffice it to say, the following is generally true (and this is why large slow bullets work to make game dead);
If you apply an equal force to two objects of differing weight, the lighter of the two will be faster and may well have more kinetic energy (ft/lbs) at the muzzle... the heavier object (bullet) will be slower, but will possess greater momentum... the lighter bullet will rapidly shed its energy as the distance increases (or when it contacts an object; "flesh" as an example), the heavier/slower object will resist shedding its energy (and/or changing its course) to a greater degree than the lighter/faster bullet, due to its higher momentum... You often hear hunters comparing the .30/30 to the .44 Mag and there is generally a debate as to which has greater effectiveness as a hunting round on deer... the truth is that the heavier slower .44 mag (Don't jump on me there are other factor's at work, such as bullet weight, barrel length, load capacity etc... but generally...) trumps the lighter faster .30/30 out to approximately 100 yards (or so), due to it's higher Momentum (and yes, frontal area also comes into play)... In general terms...this is how it plays out on paper and in the field.
The "pickle in the pudding" so to speak is trajectory... becuase all the energy or momentum in the world matters not a whit, if you can't hit what you are aiming at... the high momentum heavy/slow bullet will have an arching trajectory... and it will be more difficult to apply it accurately... inside 100 yards (maybe 200 yards depending on cailber and the talent of the shooter) it doesn't matter, but as distance increases the heavy bullet will drop rapidly (but will still maintain a high percentage of its original energy, as in; it's still lethal)... at long range you need to find the compromise between velocity (trajectory) and energy/momentum... this is where I say; "to each their own."![]()
Same can be said for ANY bullet for that matter...No telling what a bullet is going to do once it makes contact.. This is the reason I shy away from frontal, and Texas heart shots...
Even a 50 BMG
[youtube]BJD_3eKcIRQ[/youtube]
except that cast bullets are not recommended for the Ruger 44 carbine. They gum up the gas system.
Thats exactly what I was thinking. It did the job well.If there wasn't a passthrough, all the kinetic energy was absorbed by the kill. Your shooting and bullet choice did well.
No passthrough = job well dome... Thats exactly what I was thinking. It did the job well.
All I was trying to do was explain why the units are so misleading. People see foot lbs and figure the math should somehow employ weight and length. You are welcome to elaborate but in your elaboration you got a number of things wrong.
1. When you leave out the factors you do the world a disservice.
2. "shedding energy" when inside an animal is what kills it, early bullet fragmentatio notwithstanding - I said terminal ballistics were tricky. if you are seeking penetration and expansion, on two identical bullets, it will depend.on the square of the velocities. It was the penetration of projectiles into different media that first allowed physicist to develop and understand the concept of energy and the v squared relationship.
3. "Big and slow kills better" is an adage that aplies only when talking about bullets of comparable kinetic energy. E.g. a 180 gr bullet fired from a 30-06 (2913 ft lbs ME) will kill better than a 130 gr bullet from a .270 (3060 ft lbs ME). When When you try to make the same statement to compare a low energy pistol round to a hunting round you are making a mistake.
4. Energy kills. Momentum helps shape the way the energy is used terminally (hence all the ammo manufacturer hype about weight retention) but energy kills. A .44 does not have sufficient energy to dependably kill CXP3 game with one shot, even at close range (deer yes, large game no). A 30-30 does. I'm not advocating moose hunting with a 30-30, though I've seen it done but if you want to dependably down large game with a well placed kill zone shot you should have at least 1200 ft lbs of energy at point of impact (Chuck Hawks). A 30-30 has it out to 100 yards a 44 doesn't even have it at the muzzle.
Huh???
ummm.....you might want put down the crack pipe..... You apparently have no clue on this topic...we are talking about *rifles*
Here is a Ballistics comparison of .30-30 Winchester and .44 Remington Mag. Ballistics that I am going to give you are as if the .30-30 was fired from a 24" barrel and the .44 fired from a 20" barrel. Now as you know there aren't many .30-30 rifles with a 24" barrel so I can guarantee you that those numbers would show significantly less performance if they were referencing .30-30 carbines. You have to read the fine print on ballistics charts and web pages citing them to see this.
.30-30 Winchester firing Remington Core-Lokt 170gr SP
Velocity (ft/sec)
Muzzle - 2200
100 yd - 1895
200 yd - 1619
300 yd - 1381
Energy (ft. lbs.)
Muzzle - 1827
100 yd - 1355
200 yd - 989
300 yd - 720
.44 Remington Mag firing Remington Express 240gr SP
Velocity (ft/sec)
Muzzle - 1760
100 yd - 1380
200 yd - 1114
300 yd - 970
Energy (ft. lbs.)
Muzzle - 1650
100 yd - 1015
200 yd - 661
300 yd - 501
Wow you are a snide one aren't you. Well congratulations to you. You managed to find some ballistic table for a hot .44 mag round that has significant muzzle energy. Well guess what, I'm still right. It doesn't have sufficient energy at 100 yards for a clean kill on something like a moose (please read my post again, I'm talking about CXP3 game). Oh, and guess what, the 30-30 does. Furthermore you can go all over the internet and the same will be true of any round you find.
Oh and while you're at it, you may want to look at how fast your 44 is loosing velocity and energy. The 30-30 is out performing it on that too. Didn't you say those heavier bullets would maintain their velocity better. No sorry. Ballistic coefficient isn't quite the same on a pistol round as with a propper hunting round.
Now I hope will notice, I managed to correct your spurious information without any reference to a suspected drug habbit. Perhaps you could afford me the same courtesy on what will, no doubt, be an interesting rebuttal.
Oh, and guess what, the 30-30 does. Furthermore you can go all over the internet and the same will be true of any round you find.
wait....MANGED to find A ballistic table for a HOT 44 mag round? REALLY???
Dude, those are STANDARD ballistics for a NORMAL Remington FACTORY load.... My god, do some research before posting your so-called "expertise" on the Internet.
Start by looking up RIFLE ballistics for the round you are spouting these pearls of wisdom about, learn a thing or two, THEN come tell those of us that know better how we are wrong.
WW...who has actually killed moose with my "underpowered" 44
LMAO....friggin experts.....




























