@ZG47
This is fascinating . Do you have the article ? I actually had a similar experience , as well . I first tried to take the rogue elephant out with a frontal brain shot . But the bullet deformed very badly . The lead core got squeezed out of the back of the bullet upon striking the elephant’s skull . Elephant skulls are thicker at the front than at the sides . They are honeycombed with pockets of fluid .
Since the animal charged , I had to take aim at it’s knee and fire . The elephant’s leg bone snapped and he fell down . Elephants cannot move on three legs . Then , I gave him a side brain shot behind the ear , which finally killed him . To this day , the Forest Guard who was accompanying me insists that I had mistakenly used a soft nosed bullet for the first shot . But I know that this was not the case .
Also , it is entirely plausible that Hornady was making bullets for Winchester or Remington . But I doubt that Hornady was supplying both companies . This is because I sectioned 500 grain full metal jacket bullets from both Winchester and Remington in 1985 . Both of them were using steel jackets . But the jacket of the Remington bullet was far thinner than the jacket of the Winchester bullet .