Why only broadside with plastic tips? Lack of penetration?
Yes, but it's based on minimal personal experience. I called out a coyote and hit her shoulder quartering to me at about 40 yards with a 55gr Ballistic Tip (so, honestly a poor shot as the 10-ring would have been in front of her shoulder). The result was a horrible raking wound that about took the hide off her side, burst her stomach and covered one lung with fragments but did not get inside the ribs. She expired about the time I was thinking I should stop staring and shoot again. That was with a .223 WSSM so the bullet was screaming and taxed to the limit in terms of impact velocity, but I was still unimpressed. The only other coyote I shot with a plastic tipped bullet was a 50gr VMax from a .222 mag. the coyote was looking straight at me at about 100 yards from slightly downhill. The crosshairs looked good when the shot broke and he yelped and leaped at the shot, but it was last stand of the evening and I lost the blood trail at dark. That is the only coyote I've ever lost and while I of course cannot not say for sure it wasn't just a bad shot to begin with, those two experiences turned me right off of plastic tipped varmint bullets for coyotes. As it seems at least half of my called coyotes are shot either coming towards me or taking that last look back/angling away, I've had much better personal experience with less frangible bullets.
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