Why Hard Cast, over Jacketed Bullets, for bear protection, or BIG big game hunting???
Simple answer PENETRATION. If you are a student of calibres, and bullets for hunting, you will see that in the history of Man and Gun, Under Penetration has caused most of the problems.
For protection against humans this can also be true.
Over penetration is considered to be a big concern to think about, but actually, when 85% or so of the shots fired in Human to Human gunfights are misses, why worry about the 15% that do hit???
You must have enough penetration. And the bigger the hole the better.
If you can get an expanding bullet to penetrate deep enough so much the better.
What if every bullet expanded the size of a soft ball and gave deep enligh penetration, that would be great...
However there have been times where a Jacketed 44 Mag bullet did not give enough penetration on wild hogs, sricking in the gristle plate.
I shot a cow elk in the head once, side brain with a 240gr Federal factory HP. I did not get complete penetration.
I also shot a cow elk in the head, again side brain, with a 240 Hard cast bullet over 22 gr of 2400, and got complete penetration.
If a bear, black , brown, or Griz, and if you miss the head, but hit the collar or shoulder bone, most likely the jacketed bullet will be stopped buy the bone, or mushroomed and deflected.
There is a chance that a hard cast will break the bone and penetrate into the chest cavity.
Same thing if you hit a rib or the sternum.
IMHO, a heavy hard cast bullet is a better choice, giving you a more likely chance of survival.
Simple answer PENETRATION. If you are a student of calibres, and bullets for hunting, you will see that in the history of Man and Gun, Under Penetration has caused most of the problems.
For protection against humans this can also be true.
Over penetration is considered to be a big concern to think about, but actually, when 85% or so of the shots fired in Human to Human gunfights are misses, why worry about the 15% that do hit???
You must have enough penetration. And the bigger the hole the better.
If you can get an expanding bullet to penetrate deep enough so much the better.
What if every bullet expanded the size of a soft ball and gave deep enligh penetration, that would be great...
However there have been times where a Jacketed 44 Mag bullet did not give enough penetration on wild hogs, sricking in the gristle plate.
I shot a cow elk in the head once, side brain with a 240gr Federal factory HP. I did not get complete penetration.
I also shot a cow elk in the head, again side brain, with a 240 Hard cast bullet over 22 gr of 2400, and got complete penetration.
If a bear, black , brown, or Griz, and if you miss the head, but hit the collar or shoulder bone, most likely the jacketed bullet will be stopped buy the bone, or mushroomed and deflected.
There is a chance that a hard cast will break the bone and penetrate into the chest cavity.
Same thing if you hit a rib or the sternum.
IMHO, a heavy hard cast bullet is a better choice, giving you a more likely chance of survival.