I wonder if the rush to mono bullets is why some hunters aren’t hearing impacts?
They certainly don’t seem to smack a gong as hard.
I hear you on the KE comment Joel.
As I’ve aged I spend lees time trying to rectify what I know to be true with what I’ve seen to be true. Lead core bullets absolutely SLAP compared to monos.
I will never understand (I don't think) the "Slap" of a round hitting an animal.
I have shot a great many animals over my career and I cant say that I was ever in a state to hear a "Slap" or a "thud" for that matter.
Even with my "not the best" hearing, the sound is always obvious. Reminds me of a fwuck or fwook on deer at least, same sound I recall when dad would wack the car floor mats with a bar or chunk of wood before vacuuming them.Thats something to do with your hearing or concentration then most likely, not if it actually occurs.
By far the vast majority of animals I have stuck projectiles into I have heard the impact, be it a whop/whump/thump/crack depending on where they were hit. The only ones that I can remember for sure not hearing impacts are elk at less than 20-ish yards.
F=MxA....Force = Mass x accellerationI wonder if the rush to mono bullets is why some hunters aren’t hearing impacts?
They certainly don’t seem to smack a gong as hard.
That’s a very satisfying thwap indeedI hear impacts all the time when shooting game. Big or small. It’s a great indicator of a hit. Even inside 20 yards you can hear it. Sometimes you don’t hear it. Quartering shots seem not to produce sound as much IME.
I’ve shot a pile of game with monos. That has not been my experience.I wonder if the rush to mono bullets is why some hunters aren’t hearing impacts?
They certainly don’t seem to smack a gong as hard.
For myself personally, I believe that my concentration is intensely focused on shot placement, correlated with trigger control. In return, my other scenses are ingnored; ie: not hearing/remembering report of rifle, accompanied with the feeling of felt recoil.Just throwin a possibility out here, but think it could be the lead core bullet impacts and expands/fragments in such a way that all of it hits the plate, whereas more of (like part of the shank) of the mono does not, and goes in a different direction?
That would explain it, if its whats goin on. The departing chunk of the mono takes all its energy with it. Who knows...
I wonder if it is psychosomatic and I am inclined to think so.
Anyway, I remain skeptical.
I don’t think so. I’ve shot game inside 20 yards with 7mm bullets exiting the muzzle at 3100fps. You will hear that bullet hit. Unless of course you are in this zen like trance that apparently overcomes some people.To hear the smack or thud when hitting a big game animal is more common with large diameter bullets at moderate velocities and medium distances. Like 100 to 200m and hit the solid structure of the animal, a thru & thru on the lungs not so much smack. Had 35 Whelen for years and a lot of big game animals, it was a smacker!
You are not wrong, we always said that deer don't always realize that they are dead. LOLI know what you mean but man, it seems pretty inconsistent to me. A not mortally wounded deer can react pretty theatrically and one with no heart or lungs can run off with a full head of steam. In what I've seen anyway. Hard to make a call on.
Have really started liking braked rifles to stay on target and really see the impact placement and effect through the scope though, thats cool. But with moose, if I can I just shoot again.
That brings back memories, .22-250 and big, pregnant Ground Hogs, at 200 yards+ in hilly farm land, it sounded like swatting a fat guy on the ass with a canoe paddle. (the hydraulic shock with those little hollow points was awesome to watch. LOL Too many Coyotes, not enough GroundhogsI have heard the "slap" noise on ground hogs with 22 250 and other varmint with 22lr. once out of 4 times on deer with a 12ga sabot slug.
I think it has to be in a sweet spot for environment and distance. most times I heard it was without ear-pro. I don't think it's realistically repeatable on game. At any distance you hear the impact on a water bottle it will probably have potential produce the same noise from a creature.
You aren't missing anything. I don't think it is a remotely reliable indicator for how well you hit medium or large game. And any time I heard it on small game there were strong visual indicators that the shot was a good hit.
I would definitely agree with this.You can remain as skeptical as you want.
The sound a bullet striking a big game animal is NOT psychosomatic whatsoever.
It is very much real.
Although I have not heard that at point blank ranges, beyond 75 yards I damn near always do.
Regardless of the day's caliber of choice.
Reality.



























