🔴 Slugs --- Testing How Much They Expand and How Far They Penetrate

Slugs --- Testing How Much They Expand and How Far They Penetrate



Slugs for airguns won’t ever replace pellets.
But they aren’t just a fashion, either.
Slugs easily cut wind drift by more than half.
And at longer ranges they hit quarry with twice the energy.


Those are reasons enough that I want slugs (not the slimy ones, though if they are cured with lemon and served with yam and hot chili peppers, they are quite good!).



🔶 The Benefits of Hollow Points 🔶

But almost all commercially available slugs come as hollow points – and for a reason. The hollow point is supposed to expand upon impact and make a larger permanent wound cavity. This is good if your quarry’s kill zone is rather soft and fleshy, as a bigger wound produces a higher rate of DRT’s (over the F&D’s and R&D’s*). (However, if your quarry’s kill zone is a big head protected by tough bones, penetration is probably more important than expansion.)
*[F&D = fly & die | R&D = run * die]



If the hollow point projectile (slug or pellet) increases in diameter, so does the impact area, and so does the volume of crushed tissue as the projectile bullies its way through the quarry – leaving the permanent wound cavity.



For example: A .22cal projectile (slug or pellet) that expands to .295 increases its impact area by 66%.
And at that increase, even a 1½"-short wound cavity therefore increases by 85%! 85% more tissue crushed!
[Metric: A 5.5mm projectile expands to 7.5mm. Even a 4cm-short wound cavity is thereby increased by 85% – resulting in 85% more crushed tissue.]



❗ Also worth considering is the Meplat = the flat part of a wadcutter or the flat part of a hollow point including the open HP cup.

▪Most slugs have very narrow hollow point cups, giving the slug the general shape of a spitzer bullet. A spitzer will tend to slice through flesh rather than crush the flesh — and crush we want — to increase the damage, i.e., the permanent wound cavity!

▪A domed pellet will also crush flesh much less than a blunt flat projectile, i.e., one with a large meplat, a flat surface like a WC or HP.

➔ Some tests show how hollow point slugs with very small HP cups have not much expanded their overall diameter, HOWEVER they have opened up the HP cup and therefore have now a large meplat to crush tissue. 

In some sense, they fly with the BC of a slug, and crush tissue like a wadcutter = the best of both worlds...! 😄 






🔶 What Helps the Hollow Point to Expand 🔶

After seeing the often poor performance of hollow point pellets – I wanted to know what expansion I could expect from hollow point slugs.

Bob Sterne (HardAir Magazine and GTA) published some very insightful articles and posts about the subject (cf. links).
https://hardairmagazine.com/ham-columns/bob-sterne-discusses-hollowpoint-slug-design/
https://www.gatewaytoairguns.org/GTA/index.php?topic=174584.msg155979642#msg155979642





Just to summarize Bob’s excellent discussion:

Some of the attributes that support expansion of a slug are as follows:
• larger HP opening
• thinner walls of the HP cup
• softer lead
• deeper HP cup
• slits (predetermines tearing points) open the HP in petals and can aid in fragmenting the slug
• harder impact material (animal flesh is softer than play-dough is softer than clay)
higher impact velocity! (as the tests will show, depending on the impact velocity the HP will “work” – or not expand)
• a HP cup that is very deep can aid in fragmenting the slug





🔶 HP Projectile Tests 🔶

Data on HP slug expansion is still scarce, but in the following posts I’ll share the Projectile Expansion and Penetration Tests .22cal that I’ve found so far.

Take the test results with a grain of salt (or a 22-grainer of lead if you like). As more test data becomes available some test results might prove to be too optimistic, or pessimistic.




Some Benefits of the Test Results for the Shooter
• You will note in the tests that depending on the impact velocity the HP will “work” – or not expand. Knowing the muzzle velocity of a slug that your gun likes, you can do some simple ballistics to figure out at what maximum range you still can expect reasonable expansion in the quarry.
• If you have the choice of several slugs that your gun likes, based on the test results you could choose one that has better expansion, or choose a lighter (=faster) slug.
• If you wanted expansion at farther ranges, you could increase the power of your gun based on your ballistic calculations.


I thank all the airgunners who have run these sometimes very time-consuming tests, and for putting them out there for us so we could learn from them. THANK YOU!!



Matthias





🔶 An Overview and Some Background of the Projectile Tests in this Thread 🔶

When sifting through the projectile tests (PT) I decided to leave out play-dough, clay, and water as ballistic mediums as they exaggerate HP expansion. Reading what terminal ballistician have written, I considered ballistic gel, ClearBallistics.com gel, glycerin soap, wet newsprint, and of course... – real quarry (dead or alive)!

The testers often do not give specific details of their test protocol (which kind of ballistic gel they are using), nor do they give exact data (impact velocity) or measurements (expanded size of the slug). I had to do some ballistic calculations and often measure the proportions of the expanded slugs in the images in order to arrive at the data as presented below.



All the tests include the following:
• a test designator, PTXXX (where XXX is a counter; PT = projectile test)
• the ballistic medium
• impact velocity, and impact energy
• meplat (expanded flat portion of the nose, if applicable)
• expansion (total diameter)
• impactand/or penetration
• source (and notes)

Measurements in imperial and metric.




 
Projectile Tests. PT027. 

BY: Steve Scialli (AEAC) (2020)

-Ballistic Gel Calibrated.-

40-41FPE impact energy

NSA 20.2 @841fps + NSA 17.5 882 + N&N 27 770 + JSB 25 783 + FX 22 823

LINK (just add www. to the front of the following):
youtube.com/watch?v=SJZNGszt0E4





1597654815_4939142355f3a471f2c32c2.26854582.jpg

 
I just modified the above test pics to emphasize the increased meplat, the flat portion of the projectile.

A wadcutter that connects with animal tissue will violently crush the flesh infront of its meplat.

A dome or a spitzer will do much less crushing as it "slips" and slices through the flesh.

We want to crush as much tissue as we can for a larger permanent wound cavity and more bleeding.... 💀



The tests show several slugs that do not expand their overall diameter much — however, once inside the flesh their tiny HP cup opens up wide, effectively producing the tissue crushing effect of a wadcutter.

While having arrived at the quarry looking like a semi-spitzer with a very high BC.

➔ The best of both worlds....! 😄



Matthias
 
Hi,

Well i had fun today :)

My goal was to determine how good my slugs expand comparing to others slugs after that i manage to make them super accurate.

In test i used:

-JSB ko 33,9 gr

-NSA 36,2 gr

-H&N 36gr

-slugs that i made 37gr 



First i shot my slug, it penetrate 8" and the second part at 9". it was mushromed hard so there was no more material and mushrom fall apart from the base. from those four it made "bigest wound" and it started to spread first from all, but it traveled the most far. i dont have idea why. it is the one bairly see in two pieces. 
IMG_20201129_164625.1606665567.jpg


Second i shot NSA 36,2gr. it penetrate 5,8" jst litle more then Jsb but it is 2 grains heavier so i belive that was the diffirence. it made nice mushrom.

Wound size was same as with jsb and h&n.

IMG_20201129_164421.1606665804.jpg


Third it was jsb ko 33,9gr, it penetrate the least 5" but it is also the lightest. it made nice mushrom but smaler then NSA.

IMG_20201129_164536.1606665915.jpg




Fourth was H&N 36gr. it penetrate 8,2" it made small mushrom.

IMG_20201129_164301 1.1606666033.jpg




Here is picture that tells you everything. i made only 4 shots as i wanted that each bullet had untouched gel. you can aslo see speed of each bullet that was shot.

IMG_20201129_163642.1606666193.jpg




comparison of sizes of deformation
IMG_20201129_162630.1606666262.jpg
.

Then i have left one smaller and shorter piece of gel so i tried my slug 37gr this time with hollow base, the uper one. it went trough, second lover one is same shape but MK2 if i can say that. well i was shocked :) it made huge wound from the completly begining and explode in the gel. so tomorrow i will make new test also with cup and flat base to see more. but that second penetration was only half way to Nsa or Jsb. 

IMG_20201129_162435.1606666585.jpg


and comparing the wounds with nsa.
IMG_20201129_163801.1606666649.jpg


And the video 





https://youtu.be/245NsAEYOhI






 
Žan,

thank you for your efforts in making your test data available to .25cal* shooters! Nice! 👍🏼 

*[In your and my part of the world they call it 6.35cal, but the imperial system has still not come to reason.... One day it will, maybe in 2121? 🤦🏻‍♂️]



Your own slug at 37gr performed really well! Congratulations. 😊



The velocities in photo no. 5 — are they muzzle velocities, or impact velocities?

🔶 For both penetration and expansion data to be meaningful to other shooters for comparison and for estimating effective range at different power settings the impact velocity is very important. (If the BC of a slug is know, we can figure out the impact velocity — if we have the muzzle velocity and the range to the target.)



🔶 Photo no. 6 is very important — as it shows how large the wound channels will be with each slug (at a certain impact velocity). Besides the nice photo it would be helpful to have the exact diameter of the expanded slugs....



Thanks again for your effort and sharing your data. Very nice!! 👍🏼👍🏼



Matthias


 
Expansion/penetration tests don't mean much unless you shoot them into the exact medium that you want the results for.

Ballistics gelatin is homogenous, animals are not at all. How a projectile performs in ballistics gelatin is not indicative at all of how it will perform in an animal. 

Cool that you are taking the time to do these tests and share the information, but unless you are hunting ballistics gelatin, the results don't mean much. 
 
Agree, but somehow you need to mesure results betwen. It shows where each bullets stands comparing to others. Also shoting one animal is never same, you can hit bone, maybe you miss all the bones, depends in which part and how thick animal is there. It is a fact that HN bullet mushroom very bad comparing to others i tested so also probably you will get bad average mushrooming when hiting animals, comparing to others. It is not a test how far it will penetrate animal, just comparison betwen them.
 
Four-Part Series on Hollow Point Specs, Performance, and Test Results



This thread is PART (4b) of a four-part series I posted today. The other threads explain the mechanics of killing, which projectiles kill better, and which HP pellets are available (detailed specs of .22cal @ US). Links to the other parts you’ll find below.



Here’s an overview of the series:

● PART (1) Quarry: What kills’em dead – the Mechanics of Killing

• What kills is a Permanent HOLE in the quarry – nothing else. Only crushed tissue kills, not “energy dumped,” nor a “temporary wound cavity,” nor “hydrostatic shock.”
• For the HOLE to kill – it must be in the right place in the quarry: brain/spine or heart/lungs or arteries/veins (to cause hemorrhaging).
• The projectiles that make a Better HOLE in the quarry are –– larger, faster, bulldozer-nose, expanding projectiles.

https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/%f0%9f%92%80-quarry-what-killsem-dead-the-mechanics-of-killing/



● PART (2) How Much Hollow Point Expansion Does How Much More Damage?
• A larger projectile makes a larger HOLE.
• So, how much larger is the HOLE if I go from .177 cal to .25 cal? (results in Table 1)
• And how much larger is the HOLE if my hollow point projectile expands 1/10 of an inch? Or 1mm? (results in Table 2)

https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/%f0%9f%94%b4-how-much-hollow-point-expansion-does-how-much-more-damage/



● PART (3) Hollow Point Pellets – Comparison of Specs & Performance
The attached HP Pellet Specs & Performance Chart (.22cal) answers some of the following questions:
• Which HP projectiles expand better to make a Better HOLE in the quarry? –– The faster, softer HP projectiles with larger, deeper HP cups, and expansion aids do!
• What HP pellets are out there? And how do they compare (specs!)?
• How far could I shoot a certain HP pellet and still expect expansion (given the power of my gun)?
• Some HP are really long and might not fit into my magazine...: How long are the long ones really?

https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/%f0%9f%94%b4-hollow-point-pellets-comparison-of-specs-performance/



● PART (4) Hollow Points – Testing How Much They Expand and How Far They Penetrate
Every hollow point projectile (pellet or slug) performs differently, in line with its specs and the conditions. Find a collection of Projectile Expansion and Penetration Test results for both HP pellets and slugs.
(4a) HP Pellet Projectile Expansion and Penetration Tests

https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/%f0%9f%94%b4hollow-point-pellets-testing-how-much-they-expand-and-how-far-they-penetrate/

(4b) HP Slug Projectile Expansion and Penetration Tests

https://www.airgunnation.com/topic/%f0%9f%94%b4-slugs-testing-how-much-they-expand-and-how-far-they-penetrate/#post-749008



I hope this will be helpful to some! 

Matthias