Originally posted by ALLAN
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Random PICTURE of the day thread *KEEP IT WORK SAFE*
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Originally posted by naynay View PostOriginally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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Originally posted by CJ View PostIt's temporary cavitation that does the damage. The larger the diameter proportionate to the velocity the more temporary expansion and cavitation. It's a whole science. Hitting an animal in the side or profile is very different from hitting one in the head. The head is a liquid filled rigid container, the pressure rises and it ruptures/blows up. The same thing happens when you shoot a bottle of water with a .22 vs. a .308, it will explode like a bomb when a .308 hits it. A good example of this is when someone is shot with an arrow vs. a rifle. Even though they are the same diameter, the rifle will drop you, and the arrow (assuming it doesn't hit a vital organ) will allow you run around like a fool. The difference being when the .308 hits you with the velocity, it knocks a .3085" hole in you, but expands a hole inside your tissue to 4-6" for about 10" or so, then it snaps back. If you don't have the tissue or it's a rigid container it just blows up.
I shot a huge ass jackrabbit with my G3 a few years ago, tagged him in the side and he kept hopping, got a lucky head shot and his head vaporized. Naturally, it all depends on where you hit them in the head, but if it's in the skull, or a rigid surface which will transfer/contain the energy it's quite different.
I'm not sure this word means what you think it means.1971 Ford Torino - Time to go bigger and better.
2011 F150 Limited - Stock with a 6.2
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Originally posted by Torinoman View PostI'm not sure this word means what you think it means.
For example
If its firearms related CJ will know what the word means.Jon
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Originally posted by Torinoman View PostI'm not sure this word means what you think it means.
Minimum Wound Area: MWA (cm2) = [ 1 cm2 / 15 kg Body Mass ] + 60 cm2
Important caveats are necessary here. Only penetration and cavitation in the thoracic cavity through cardio-vascular tissues produces effective hemorrhaging (unless a major artery is cut). In other words, the penetration and cavitation produced in muscle and gut don't count toward this measure of a MWA because it does not bleed as freely or in the volume of heart, lung and liver tissue. This MWA value is based on a shotline transverse through the thorax (hitting heart and/or lungs). The thorax depth assumed here is based on a line passing between the number 4 sternal ribs above the heart. The figures presented are approximate, as animal anatomy varies by species and individual.
I know the way I used cavitation is not the usual way you hear it used. Typically you use it in regards to hydrodynamics, but the principals are the same."When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
"A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler
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