fourfive8
AH legend
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2017
- Messages
- 4,349
- Reaction score
- 10,220
- Media
- 263
- Hunted
- USA, South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Botswana
I hear ya about penetration. BTW penetration is a derivative of: resistance vs momentum. There are times when the highest priority might be greatest penetration. Of course there are times when a deep penetrating, controlled expanding is called for. This Raptor design seems to fit in that category.
I was somewhat surprised by the depth of penetration of the Raptor bullet I tested. After some thought about the results they seem to make sense though- the base shank that continues on after initial petal separation has a frontal area right at caliber diameter compared to a mushroom (like a Swift A Frame) or expanded petal config (like a Barnes TSX), each of which have much great cross section area thus much greater resistance to penetration. Also, this 420 gr 458 design retains 80% of original weight after petal separation. I assume the heavier versions (either 450 or 470 gr) of the 458 Raptor would have the same sized hollow point therefore the percentage of retained weight would be even greater than 80%.
For the most reliable straight line and deepest penetration, I would consider one of these among other similar bullets: the GS FP solid, the Woodleigh Hydrostatically Stabilized Solid, the North Fork Flat Point Solid and the CEB Safari Flat Point Solid. In addition to frontal cross section area, straight line and stabilized penetration both have a lot to do with depth of penetration.
Here's an example of a bullet used specifically for maximum penetration. A 450 gr 458 GS Flat Point Solid from 458 Express recovered from a bull elephant. The shot was a high angle "WDM Bell type" into the skull from the rear.
I was somewhat surprised by the depth of penetration of the Raptor bullet I tested. After some thought about the results they seem to make sense though- the base shank that continues on after initial petal separation has a frontal area right at caliber diameter compared to a mushroom (like a Swift A Frame) or expanded petal config (like a Barnes TSX), each of which have much great cross section area thus much greater resistance to penetration. Also, this 420 gr 458 design retains 80% of original weight after petal separation. I assume the heavier versions (either 450 or 470 gr) of the 458 Raptor would have the same sized hollow point therefore the percentage of retained weight would be even greater than 80%.
For the most reliable straight line and deepest penetration, I would consider one of these among other similar bullets: the GS FP solid, the Woodleigh Hydrostatically Stabilized Solid, the North Fork Flat Point Solid and the CEB Safari Flat Point Solid. In addition to frontal cross section area, straight line and stabilized penetration both have a lot to do with depth of penetration.
Here's an example of a bullet used specifically for maximum penetration. A 450 gr 458 GS Flat Point Solid from 458 Express recovered from a bull elephant. The shot was a high angle "WDM Bell type" into the skull from the rear.
Last edited: