Yes, I am well aware of such things. The 100 grain pointed Speer bullets I was using would would travel through the atmosphere with teh best of them.
People have argued over paper ballistics of rifle cartridges for as long as I can remember. And I can remember for a rather long time! The difference between paper ballistics and the performance of the cartridge on game, is often so different to what one expects, that it is sometimes comical.
Case in point. Years ago I took a young son mountain hunting and he shot a mountain goat. He used his 243 Krico, with factory loaded IVI Imperial, with a 100 grain soft point bullet.
For those not familiar with goats, they are considered hard to kill. Much harder than a deer. If you look at charts recommending cartridges for various game, the calibre often stated for mountain goats is the 300 W mag.
This goat was standing broadside at 1oo yards. Son took a good rest, shot and the goat rolled down the mountain, never to move again. When we skinned it out, the bullet was under the skin on the far side, in text book mushroom pattern. The biologist who checked the horns said the billy was above average size.
Later at home, I decided to chronograph the factory cartridges he used. Five of the Imperial IVI averaged 2540 fps over the Oehler!!!!!
Without changing a thing, I checked five of my hadloads with 100 grain Sierra bullets. They averaged 3094 fps.
I am now looking at my note book on it. Everything is correct and the way it happened, including just reaching for a new batch of ammo to test, exactly the same way, without even moving from the shooting bench.
So, if I had known this, would I have let the young son take a rifle goat hunting that just fired a 100 grain bullet at 2540 fps, 12 feet from the muzzle?
Absolutely no way! But, we didn't know this, so he just shot the goat and it quickly died!