Candace fellators love harping on muh 30-06, but can't answer basic questions like the headstamp.
Reading from my Lee's Second Edition reloading manual, a 150 grain jacketed 30-06 round can range velocities from 2333 ft/s (40.1 gr v-N135) to 3072 ft/s (Max load 65 gr H-Suprform), remaining within safe specifications.
Bullet energy wise, that means muzzle energy alone, not energy at 150 yards, that's a range of 1812-3142 ftlbs of energy. That is a very dramatic spread, that after distance energy lost is factored in, you cannot reasonably say what a single 30-06 will do without bullet and powder info
Just get the alpha and make up your own mind, how have you not learned this yet
LOL, I already made up my mind, I already told you.
Exactly my point; you're entitled to have made up your mind without learning anything, but don't convince yourself it's "awakening"
Wild how much of a blind spot this is for ppl here
Tell me more about a 3006 getting stopped by a neck
Wild how ppl on this site listen to a podcaster and suddenly think they have all of the answers. LOL
Just all the questions actually; you're the one who's confident and secure in your ignorance
How did you ever end up here with so little curiosity and humility?
Candace fellators love harping on muh 30-06, but can't answer basic questions like the headstamp.
Reading from my Lee's Second Edition reloading manual, a 150 grain jacketed 30-06 round can range velocities from 2333 ft/s (40.1 gr v-N135) to 3072 ft/s (Max load 65 gr H-Suprform), remaining within safe specifications.
Bullet energy wise, that means muzzle energy alone, not energy at 150 yards, that's a range of 1812-3142 ftlbs of energy. That is a very dramatic spread, that after distance energy lost is factored in, you cannot reasonably say what a single 30-06 will do without bullet and powder info
Could it not exit soft neck tissue from 100 yds? Get real.
And that's one of 5 things i mentioned and 100 inconsistencies
Next you'll tell me you believe the text messages