keep in mind even when a bullet fails, more often than not it will still kill the animal probably just as fast as one that doesnt fail
Explain to me how that failed than? failed to what? failed to stay together, but
didnt fail to kill rapidly...
if weight retention is a ploy, maybe you should load some vmax for your moose hunt
Thats the ploy im talking about dude, the one that thinks you need a bullet to stay in one piece to succeed in killing an animal. But a fragmenting bullet is a different story all together...
Ok, allow me to reiterate... There is a bit of a difference between a speer hotcor, corlokt, winchester PSP, silvertip, ballistictip etc. and a V-max.
Do you think I'd waste my money on a Partition, TSX, X, whatever for a 30-06 or 308 30-30 class of cartridge? Aside from the vmax on anything but maybe grizzly ( cant say, I have no experience) you wouldnt notice the difference between any of the above rounds in int performance on game. the only difference is the dent in your wallet.
When you push the velocity envelope further into Short mag, Magnum, and Ultra class magnum categories, the need for a premium bullet does increase dramatically, and this is what the whole weight retention race was borne of, and where it applies... Not to most non magnum rounds as most apply them to.
We all to often blame bullet performance for a bad placed shot...
Its easier on the ego.
most try to cure it with a premium bullet, but what happens next time they miss the mark?
they're talking about how XYZ premium bullet doesnt open up well on deer, and they're going to try ABC ultrapremium bullet...
when the problem really lies elsewhere