Northman999
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Southern Yukon
Okay, I'll stir up the hornet's nest here with this question, but I think it's fair to ask.
Does anyone know of any real, scientifically sound studies that have shown that full metal jacket (ball, or service ammo, or whatever you personally like to call it) is not effective for hunting?
It seems that most everywhere you look, FMJ ammo is not legal for hunting, but I wonder how many of these jurisdictions actually bothered to conduct sound studies to find out how these bullets actually functioned in real life hunting situations. I know for a fact that LOTS of government policy is just borrowed from others with little or no real scutiny, and this might be one of those things. FMJ has been known to deliver grevious injury in combat, and hunters in Africa will often use customized "solids" that specifically are designed for penetration and not expanding, so where is the evidence that FMJ is going to fail for hunting? I know also that many of you have heard of bullets failing in the field, but these failures are usually around bullets fragmenting or expanding too much without penetration, totally the opposite of FMJ.
So, anyone know what the deal is with the "no FMJ for hunting" thing? Maybe someone out there "saw a guy once" shoot a moose with some FMJ 308 or something and can let us know what actually happened?
Does anyone know of any real, scientifically sound studies that have shown that full metal jacket (ball, or service ammo, or whatever you personally like to call it) is not effective for hunting?
It seems that most everywhere you look, FMJ ammo is not legal for hunting, but I wonder how many of these jurisdictions actually bothered to conduct sound studies to find out how these bullets actually functioned in real life hunting situations. I know for a fact that LOTS of government policy is just borrowed from others with little or no real scutiny, and this might be one of those things. FMJ has been known to deliver grevious injury in combat, and hunters in Africa will often use customized "solids" that specifically are designed for penetration and not expanding, so where is the evidence that FMJ is going to fail for hunting? I know also that many of you have heard of bullets failing in the field, but these failures are usually around bullets fragmenting or expanding too much without penetration, totally the opposite of FMJ.
So, anyone know what the deal is with the "no FMJ for hunting" thing? Maybe someone out there "saw a guy once" shoot a moose with some FMJ 308 or something and can let us know what actually happened?