What was the weight of the NP and Hornady at the following stages of penetration:
1", 3", 7" etc etc.
The weights were obviously decreasing. This means the calculation of momentum is not (if you use the initial bullet weight) accurate, nor is the effect of sectional density. Additionally, we don't know the diameters of the various bullets at various stages of penetration.
Bullet construction is only one factor in the multitude of factors that affect performance. If you want to compare the effects of sd and momentum on penetration in dry paper, you need to look at two bullets that are equal in construction - ie NP vs NP, TSX vs TSX etc.
But GH already knows this.
Yes, I sure do.
It's one of the aspects of the "which bullet/which cartridge" debates that I think is overblown.
People chuck around numbers to prove that one bullet/cartridge is better than the other, but they dont' have a number value for bullet construction that is easily defineable.
I prefer to shoot a coupel of bullets at some paper, compare it to what I already *know* will work, and make a determination based on what I see, not what my calculater tells me. And from this, what I see is that the 130gr TTSX did just as well or better than any of the larger bullets, impacting at a velocity that would shred many bullets, with no more recoil and shooting pretty darn flat.
I can get a 125gr Ballistic Tip going over 3500 FPS and that would start off with about the same energy, momentum and SD...But wouldn't get too far into the paper!
Which is why -after- placement- bullet construction is going to trump my calculator.




















































