Reading various forums, including this one, and all the talk about blocks of gel and the necessity of deep enough penetration to vitals being the most important factor in bullet and load selection, and various Youtube videos from various gun channels and pundits, I've heard everything on the subject. All the way from "them ur just blocks o Jello, means nothing" to even hearing someone quote Ayoob as saying that 12-18 inches is outside the normal dimensions of a human being. (If the respected Mr. Ayoob didn't say this, or did, I'm not sure, I do not like false attributions if he did not), and all the talk that getting to vitals is actually not that hard considering that the average chest is not that deep.
I enlisted a friend this weekend and took 45 minutes out of a Saturday to create a video that refutes the notion that the dimensions of a man, in the conditions of combat, and the angles of the real world fight, would not seem to need 12-18 inches of legitimate penetration. Beyond the differences between human flesh and gel, 12 inches can certainly be a short way in real life.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQcNjIThmHQ[/ame]
Perhaps a bit winded, like I am in many of my posts, and perhaps a bit simplistic for those more familiar, and not well scripted, nor with enough time taken to get the most scientific of measurements down to the half inch or less. However, it should demonstrate the concept that attackers will not always come at you flat chested, square on, and give you the type of shooting angle that you get on your silhouettes at the range.
I enlisted a friend this weekend and took 45 minutes out of a Saturday to create a video that refutes the notion that the dimensions of a man, in the conditions of combat, and the angles of the real world fight, would not seem to need 12-18 inches of legitimate penetration. Beyond the differences between human flesh and gel, 12 inches can certainly be a short way in real life.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQcNjIThmHQ[/ame]
Perhaps a bit winded, like I am in many of my posts, and perhaps a bit simplistic for those more familiar, and not well scripted, nor with enough time taken to get the most scientific of measurements down to the half inch or less. However, it should demonstrate the concept that attackers will not always come at you flat chested, square on, and give you the type of shooting angle that you get on your silhouettes at the range.