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Old May 5, 2014, 10:07 AM   #9
Smith and Wesson
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Join Date: March 29, 2014
Location: Texas
Posts: 55
Quote:
I don't think you'regoing to have much luck with either of those bullets not fragmenting, especially if you shoot your deer in the shoulder. That statement brings me to this question: Why are you going to shoot your deer in the shoulder? You risk destroying a lot of meat when you do that and both of the bullets you're looking at do a wonderful job when poked through the lungs.
I would try to shoot behind the shoulder when ever I can, but if a less than perfect shot presents itself where a shoulder is the only shot you can take, I'd like to be confident that my bullet would hold together enough to get the job done.
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