Magic Bullets
There are a lot of misconceptions about bullets and how they work.
There is no voodoo to what a projectile does. There is no mystery.
There is only ignorance and misunderstanding. So, the next time you
see a full color 2 page advertisement for some wonderfully tactical
ammunition that is obviously used by every Special Forces Ninja out
there… take it with a grain of salt.
Let’s take a look at how a bullet stops a bad guy. Lots of people who
read gun magazines and little else use a certain phrase way too much.
“One Shot Stop”. These are the same guys that go on and on about
bullets and loads and are always searching for that Magic Bullet. The
“Black Arrow” that will slay evil even if it misses. There is no such
thing. Some hollow points are better at certain aspects of bullet
performance than others… but in effect, they all do the same thing.
Make holes. The trick is to make the holes where they do the most
damage. This is called “Shot Placement” and is the most critically
important aspect of a bullet wound.
There is more than one way to skin a cat. There is also more than one
way for the bullet to stop a threat.
1.
Hydraulically.
Making the target bleed out. Once a human looses enough blood, he goes
into
Hypovolemic
shock.
Hypovolemic shock refers to a medical or
surgical condition in which rapid fluid loss results in multiple organ
failure due to inadequate tissue perfusion. Most often, Hypovolemic
shock is secondary to rapid blood loss (hemorrhagic
shock).
The
cardiovascular system initially responds to Hypovolemic shock by
increasing the heart rate, increasing myocardial contractility, and
constricting peripheral blood vessels. This means to you and I that
shots to extremities get a biological response that naturally
reduces the loss of blood. A center mass hit is required to insure
this rapid loss of blood. If you aim Center Of Mass (COM from now on)
the bullet has the best chances of penetrating deeply into vital
internal organs.
2.
Structurally.
The human body is built on a solid framework we call the skeleton.
Certain bones in the skeleton support the whole weight of body. I’m
talking about the legs and the pelvis. A shot that hits and shatters
one of these bones disrupts the structure and causes a collapse.
Actually making this shot is difficult as the legs are much thicker
than the actual bone. There is another downside to that kinda of a
shot, and that is the subject may still have some fight left in him.
He may not be able to stand, and probably wont be doing any tap dancing
for some time, but if he is armed, he is still a threat. He just might
still be able to take a shot back at you.
3.
Electrically.
CNS.
Central Nervous System. The nervous system in the human body is
basically like electric wiring and all the wires run to the brain via
the conduit called the central nervous system. It’s located in the
spine. Sounds easy enough, but really this is where it gets
complicated. If you fire a shot that hits the spine and severs the
CNS, you’ve disrupted the electrical system. But only everything “Down
Stream” from that wound. That could be a problem. If it was a COM
shot and you hit the subject in the spin in the middle of the back, he
will not be able to use his legs, but the upper body is still connected
and functional. The subject could still return fire. The place that
you want to hit to turn the subject off like a light switch is a very
small target. You want to hit the Medulla Oblongata. It is the size of
a Grade A Medium egg, it is nested in a protective covering of very
solid bone. Making that shot with a handgun is unlikely. Unless your
subject is bound and kneeling in front of you and your about to give
him the Mafia Classic “Two shots to the back of the head”… don’t even
think about taking that shot. In such a dynamic event as a gunfight,
you’re a fool if you think your going to be making that kinda of a
shot. Even bench rested. Your target is small and the subject is
moving… Take the shot you can get and aim COM. Now, if your in the
urban police sniper role and you have a nice .308 rifle with a high
power scope, then MAYBE this shot is an option. Especially if you only
have one shot it has got to stop the subject instantly… that is what
you want to hit. Like a light switch. Effective – but hard to get.
4.
Psychologically.
Getting a bullet wound, even a minor can have a drastic effect on
someone’s moral motivation. Some people, they see a little blood, and
they just lose the will to fight. They give up right then and there.
They may even go into shock. Some people have even died from this,
when the wound its self was not even life threatening. Although this
does and can happen, don’t bank on it. You might think that the bad
guy might stop having been hurt. There is a pretty good chance if they
were not bright enough to stop at the sight of an aimed gun, they are
not going to stop with a mere wounding. Sometimes getting hurt just
makes the subject all the more dangerous. Your shot may have been a
lethal one and that guy will die… but in the mean time, he wants
nothing more than to take your head off. The famous Miami Massacre in
which two mortally wounded villains took on and wounded and killed
several agents of the FBI is a good example of this. Then again, a
wounded villain could have caught a poorly aimed slug, and all the
sudden has a vision of his mortality and throws in the towel right
there on the spot. You never know. Don’t count on this… if you get
it, great. But predicting psychology is a lot more guess work than
predicting the weather.
Looking at these four ways of how a bullet stops a fight, I am left
with the simple conclusion that the only thing that you can bank on is
well aimed shots to the
Center Of Mass. You want to use as big of a bullet as you can handle…
in as powerful of a load as you can handle. You want to drive that
slug deep into the vital organs of the threat. That has the best
chances of stopping the threat via one of these 4 ways. Notice that I
used the word “shots”?
I
have never seen a situation where a shooting was warranted that only
warranted one single shot. You can multiply your bullet’s “stopping
power” by multiplying the number of hits. Follow that first shot with
another one. Shoot until the threat stops. Firing one shot and
waiting to see what happens is not a good idea. You shoot until the
threat is no longer a threat. This is for Police or Military or Momma
at the Mall in the parking lot. Banking on the One Shot Stop is a bad
idea. The only people who do are the gun writers who get to deposit
the check for the articles.
UPDATE:
To clarify and muddy the waters further,
let's look at what a round does specifically to tissue. Now,
there are 2 different kinds of basic rounds. Handgun rounds and Rifle
rounds.
Let's look at Handguns first. Even the
most powerful handguns fall far short of the energy levels of a rifle.
This is why hunters don't take to the field with handguns. A handgun
bullet hits the target with and delivers blunt force trauma. Much like
throwing a rock. The bullet penetrates because of its energy but this
isn't a piercing. A handgun bullet crushes the tissue all the way
through and leaves the permanent wound channel as pretty much the only
damaged tissue.
A rifle round is different. Thanks to
the bullet shape and the higher energy levels the rifle bullet does
much more damage. First of all, the rifle round pierces the tissue
like a knife blade. It cuts through the flesh much cleaner than the
blunt force of the handgun, but thanks to aerodynamic forces it does
some nasty things. First off is the vacuum effect from the bullet's
aerodynamic drag. This vacuum pulls debris into the wound channel...
debris that can become secondary projectiles and or introduce infection
to the wound. (A handgun round will only punch a small bit of debris
like a cookie cutter as it passes through barriers like fur or
clothing) Very nasty that debris.
Now to understand what happens next, you
have to have a little understanding of fluid dynamics. Have you ever
watched a fast boat? What follows the boat? The wake. The wake is
the essentially the boat's slow motion shockwave of displacement of
water across the surface as the boat passes through it. The same thing
happens with a rifle round, but much much faster. Water can not be
compressed. Water does react though... it's pushed out and away, and
then it is sucked back to fill the vacuum. Tissue is essentially
water. Water that is held together in the collection of cells we call
tissue. The shockwave from a rifle shot moves so fast and so hard that
it literally shatters the cellular walls. The result is that in the
area around the rifle hit, the tissue is pretty much transformed into
jelly. The higher the power of the rifle the greater that cavitation
damage. The shape of the rifle's bullet of course also plays an
effect, just like the shape of a boat's hull. This shockwave can also
disrupt the neural network through and around the body of the creature
that has been shot.
There is some misunderstanding in the
shooting community about this shockwave. It happens in a very small
and ineffective way with a handgun round... yet because of this
misunderstanding some guys play on it and sell handgun rounds that are
advertised as creating huge shockwave damage which is just not
possible. That would be like a Bi-Plane creating a sonic boom.... it
just isn't happening.
UPDATE:
5.
Denial of
Oxygen to the Brain. Cerebral Anoxia and Hypoxia.
Also contained
herein: an addendum to CNS injury, some interesting facts about your
heart and blood, and an extremely fun description of hydraulic
cavitation.
Found these on the
subject of Anoxia/Hypoxia and your heart:
http://www.thecochranfirmno.com/areas-brainjury-anoxic.html
http://healthlink.mcw.edu/article/921384224.html
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2003/IradaMuslumova.shtml
I submit this as
number 5 because it’s different from system-wide hydraulic failure.
You aren’t necessarily bleeding the target out, or ever even inducing
Hypovolemic or Hemorrhagic shock. The brain uses about a fifth of the
body’s oxygen supply. Cut off or even restrict it, and he can die with
most of his blood still in his veins and arteries. That’s what we
hunters try to do with every big-game shot.
There are two—well,
three main ways to accomplish this cerebral anoxia/hypoxia.
The third, which I
almost didn’t mention, is to pinch off the carotid arteries. There’s
one on either side of the neck, and if your grip is on target, the
subject passes out in seconds. Cerebral anoxia. Denial of
oxygen-bearing blood to the brain. If you continue to hold, he
eventually dies. But the unconsciousness is, literally, seconds away.
But that’s a hand-to-hand move. If you have a knife, you can stab him
in his carotids, instead. This causes both anoxia and system-wide
hydraulic failure (hypovolemic
shock). Which one kills him first will be a toss-up, but he’ll loose
consciousness in seconds. See, the carotids are two of the main
branches of blood flow from the heart, so he’ll be pumping his blood
directly out of his body. At the same time, that blood isn’t reaching
his brain, so it’s dying of anoxia. He goes unconscious from the
anoxia, and then that and hypovolemic shock are in a race to kill him.
Some facts:
-
The average adult
contains about 5 liters of blood.
-
The average healthy
heart, running an average 75bpm, pumps about 4 to 5 liters per
minute.
-
That’s means the
whole blood content of your body circulates completely just under
once per minute.
-
Under stress or
during exercise, the blood-flow can be quadrupled, to between 15 and
20 liters per minute.
-
A man in a fight,
with his carotid artery cut, is, whether he likes it or not, going to
be doing his darndest to pump out his own life’s blood as fast as he
can. One minute, maybe two, to
congestive heart failure, through just one hole in one carotid
artery. A true spray.
Second, and far
easier than an attack on the carotids is to is to simply shoot the man
through the heart. This is what hunters try to do with big game.
Destroy the heart, and it stops pumping. Blood flows for another
second or so on momentum alone, and then it comes to rest, and even
begins draining toward the lowest end of the body. Which is the
opposite end from the head. Again, the brain needs continuous oxygen
to function. All metabolic processes in the human body begin with ATP,
and ATP is produced via the Krebs Cycle, which is essentially the
controlled burning (oxidizing) of carbohydrates. No oxygen, no Krebs
Cycle, no ATP, no cellular function, no brain function. Stopping the
heart is the fastest kill possible, save for the destruction of the
Medulla Oblongata. Stop the heart, and the subject will usually
fall where he stands. Full death in seconds.
A note to
your readers regarding CNS injuries: they will not stop the heart.
That’s the other thing to be aware of regarding spinal shots. Even
without nervous input, the heart will continue to beat, thanks to God’s
miracle, the
Sinus Node. The Sinus Node is a point at the top of the heart
where an electrochemical impulse begins in the muscle cells, causing
them to contract. The impulse cascades down heart from there, causing
all the other cells to act likewise. Thump. The heart beats. The
Sinus Node is not a thing, not visible or recognizable. It is just a
place. No one, to my knowledge, knows exactly what makes it work. It
generally does its thing on command from the CNS, but it will continue
to generate its cascading signal even without that input. This is the
grain of truth behind legends of hearts beating after being ripped out
of bodies, as in “Temple
of Doom.” The ramifications of this capability should be obvious.
The heart is a trooper. It will keep fighting, even when all its
comrades lie dead or dying around it. And it has won many Alamo-type
situations, thanks to that fighting spirit. It might just keep you
alive, all on its own, long enough for the paramedics to arrive. Or,
it might keep your foe conscious just long enough to get off one last
shot.
First, and easiest,
is the lung-shot, which causes cerebral hypoxia. Hypoxia is Anoxia’s
twin sister. Anoxia is the restriction of blood flow; hypoxia is free
blood flow carrying restricted quantities of oxygen. The brain
continues to pump blood to the brain, but the blood it pumps is
oxygen-poor. Why? Because your target is drowning. You won’t know
it, save for a little bubble or trickle of blood at his lips, perhaps,
but his lung (or lungs, if you’re good) are filling up with his own
blood, if those lungs even still exist. All the blood in the world
won’t do you any good if it’s not carrying oxygen. As with a the
carotid artery puncture, hydraulic failure is not far behind, for the
lungs are by necessity one of the most bloody parts of the body,
since surface-area is a major factor in transporting oxygen into the
blood. Death from a lung shot, depending on severity, can be almost as
quick as a heart shot. A rifle bullet or high-energy projectile of any
sort can cause the lung to disintegrate via cavitation (see below), but
even a simple hole in a lung will bleed hard and fast. Mid to high
holes are better for this because they bleed down into the rest of the
lung. It fills up with blood, which is just like filling up with
water. An exploded lung will kill in seconds. A filling lung might
take longer, but will still take only a fraction of the time required
to actually bleed someone into Hypovolemic Shock with a liver shot or
something of the sort.
All in all, it’s just
another case for Center Mass. While a shot to the Medulla Oblongata is
instant death, a shot to the heart is almost as fast—indeed, just as
fast, in practical terms. Lungs are close behind. A good side-on with
a rifle will pass through one lung, through the heart, and through the
other lung before exiting. Any one of those brings near-instant
unconsciousness, if not near-instant brain death. So, yeah, aim for
his heart. “Aim small, miss small,” goes the “Patriot” quote. Aim at
the heart, and if you miss, you hit the lungs. Any of them will cause
cerebral anoxia/hypoxia and almost instant incapacitation.
I mentioned
“cavitation” above. In the interests of general education and the
dissemination of information, I’ll give it a few words as well. What
I’m referring to is specifically “Hydraulic Cavitation,”
First, Newtonian
physics: A moving mass hits a relatively (it’s ALL relative, after
all) stationary mass. The stationary mass is, of course, happy where
it is, thanks to Inertia (God rest ye, Newton). However, the moving
mass has momentum, another kind of Inertia, and insists that the
stationary mass “Get out of the way!” Well, for the stationary mass to
vacate, it must acquire some kinetic energy. It gets this energy from
the object that is striking it. The amount of energy transferred
depends on the masses involved, as well as some variables such as
elasticity and friction, and of course the actual amount of energy the
moving mass starts with. Basically, it takes more energy to move a
bigger object. So if the stationary mass is huge and the moving mass
is tiny, the stationary mass will “stop” the moving mass. Splat. Like
a meteor hitting the earth. Of course, nothing is absolute. The
stationary mass will move a little, but in the case of the meteor and
the earth, the difference in the earth’s velocity isn’t enough to
notice. If on the other hand, the moving mass is huge and the
stationary mass is tiny, the moving mass may not even slow down to a
noticeable degree, but the stationary mass will suddenly take on a
great deal of velocity. You’ll see this if you ever see someone (a
person, a deer, a dog) get hit by a car. The car hardly seems to
notice. But the poor victim notices. The victim does NOT plaster to
the front of the car. Rather, the victim launches, suddenly taking on
a velocity even greater than car had when it hit. Hence the “flying
thirty feet through the air” part of most car-vs-pedestrian encounters.
Yeah, anyway, hope
you followed that.
So, bullet vs you.
Bullet hits your flesh. Your flesh would rather sit still, but the
bullet is very insistent. “Incoming fire has the right of way,” is
another quote on M. Ogre’s site. So after a brief (read:
instantaneous) resistance, the flesh at the point of contact gives
way. No, I take that back: it FLIES away. But the bullet is fast,
man. Real fast. And soft tissue (brain, guts, and the like—all 70+%
water) isn’t much of a resisting force. So the bullet and the leading
edge of the shock-wave it created on impact travel together through the
body. The shockwave trails out in a wide cone behind the projectile
(like the fire coming off the nose of an Orbiter on reentry). But
wait, that shock-wave-cone-thing is the actual tissue from the point of
impact, still moving away from the bullet. So what about the other
tissue it hits along the way? Well, the tissue compresses as much as
it can. But tissue is, again, seventy-something percent water. Water
is liquid. Liquid is a “compressed state.” Unlike a gas, a liquid is
a small as it can get, molecularly speaking. The molecules simply
can’t get any closer together, unless you’re measuring on a minute
scale and super-cooling the liquid. Which we’re not. In fact, we’re
heating the liquid. Because what energy the bullet imparted to the
flesh that couldn’t be immediately turned into motion was turned into
heat instead. And the bullet is hot to begin with, because it was
propelled by an explosion.
So that’s just one other factor AGAINST compression of the tissue.
So where does this
flesh, being bulldozed as it is by
other flesh, go? Well, find a man who’s been shot in the
front, and take a look at his back, and then you tell me. That
cantaloupe-sized hole is there for a reason.
Okay, so we have a
cone-shaped bulldozing effect. But if that’s the original flesh from
the point of impact, pushing outward, then what’s inside the cone?
Nothing. It’s empty. There isn’t even any air there. The bullet is
moving too fast for air molecules to stay filled in behind it. See,
they had their own inertia. Then the bullet came whipping through,
pushing them away to the side rather harshly. The air molecules are
still moving OUT after the bullet passes. It takes them a moment to
slow down and reverse course, to fill in where the bullet went
through. Same with slightly-compressed soft tissue. That original
mass of flesh is slowing down, because it’s running into all of the
other flesh in the affected area and transferring its energy. So the
shockwave is now no longer pushing like a bulldozer, but passing from
cell to cell like a true wave. Like a seismic wave travels through the
ocean. But fear not, you still get your explosive exit wound. After
all, that seismic wave ends in a tsunami when it hits the shore, even
if those water molecules aren’t the same ones it started in. So, yeah,
that original mass of flesh is slowing down, but it hasn’t stopped yet,
and it certainly hasn’t reversed course to fill in the hole. But it’s
about to.
You see, that flesh
is feeling a pull from behind. This can be compared to the blow-back
in a high-heat explosion. Remember those images of early nuke tests?
The initial shockwave goes by, and then the wind starts blowing TOWARD
the epicenter, because the heat at the center has caused the air there
to shoot up into a mushroom cloud, leaving a void that has to be
filled. Well, in the case of your bullet, the shockwave itself caused
the void.
Ladies and gentlemen,
that void is what we officially call the Cavity. Hence “Cavitation.”
The Cavity is a vacuum, and nature abhors a vacuum, so it tries to fill
this vacuum with whatever is nearby. Air flows in from the
entry-wound, but most of all, soft tissue, having offloaded the kinetic
energy of the shockwave to the next layer of cells, falls back into its
original place. Except it doesn’t fall, it surges. This in itself can
happen with an almost explosive force, causing a little bit of spray
forward, toward the entry wound, and adding to the explosion that’s
currently taking place at the point of exit.
So what is the final
effect of all this? Well, the flesh of your brain just vacated a
volume the size of a plum (or even larger) and then refilled it, in a
tiny fraction of a second, probably at supersonic speeds. Complex
molecular structures such as those that form cells simply can not stand
up to this kind of abuse. The bonds that hold cells to each other to
form coherent tissues are even weaker. The result is that what flows
back into the gap—as well as all soft tissue anywhere nearby that got
pounded and compressed and generally abused by the passing
shock-wave—is no longer tissue at all, but rather what those in the
business call “soup.” It’s just assorted liquids, with a few bits of
tattered, barely coherent flesh suspended within.
My 6mm did this to
one entire lung
of a Tennessee whitetail deer. I found some of that lung along the
blood trail, mixed in with the blood itself. There were a few
recognizable chunks, but the rest of the lung tissue was completely
pulverized. A high-energy bullet to the head will destroy most of the
brain in the same way.
What does this mean for you shooters?
Well, it means “If you can choose what to bring to a gun fight, bring a
rifle, and bring friends with rifles.” Pistols rarely deliver enough
energy to cause cavitation. You can shoot a man in the head, and he
just might live, all though he might be a changed man afterwards,
either because of the psychological trauma or because you remapped the
synapses that determine his personality (yes, your personality IS a
mapping of synaptic links across the brain). All you’ve done is make a
hole. However, shoot a man in the head with a rifle cartridge (even a
5.56 NATO Ball, if the range is under a hundred yards or so, though
bigger holes are still better holes), and you’ve made a soup out of
everything inside his skull.
Indeed, Cavitation is one of the main
reasons why Michael Lee Platt was able to kill as many FBI officers as
he did on
April 11th
of 1986 after already taking a supposedly mortal bullet wound in
his chest. The FBI were using pistols. Platt had a
Mini-14. Cavitation is the reason rifles stop the target when
pistols can’t. Cavitation and the fact that rifle bullets go through
Kevlar on a regular basis. If you want to stop a rifle bullet, you
have to try
harder.
Special thanks to Horde Member Ancient
for this new information.
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Copyright
G H Hill 1999-2012
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