Seismic Sam wrote:I'm in Barcelona, it's midnight, and I'm not going to write a book about this. Velocity does NOT correlate with penetration!! If you go too light and too fast, the bullet can blow up on impact and leave a nasty bu survivable 3" deep wound. Ther is also the differnce in the way you figure it, either in ft-lbs or Taylor Knock-Out factor. The way you are heading appears to be based on ft-lbs, which favors velocity over bullet weight and to some extent caliber, in that caliber isn't even considered in the ft-lbs calculation. Then there is the whole matter of bullet construction, which people like Elmer Keith wrote whole abooks about. Bottom line, it ain't that simple any way you cut it, and you have a lot more learning in front of you to fully understand this subject.
+1
This subject comes up over and over and over again, and it's because laymen have a difficult time grasping the subtle differences between momentum and energy. (I'm not being derogative mind you, since these things are not easy to fully understand, even if the equations seem simple.) Then, you add on top of it the effect of momentum or energy on viscoelastic media like tissue and bone,
AND then you try to extrapolate from that the effect on a living system (stopping power, etc)......Voila! You have just jumped down the rabbit hole.
If you forget about the effects on tissue for a second, one can just look at the difference between momentum and energy (THEY ARE NOT THE SAME) to at least get a grasp of why there is confusion.
Momentum = Mass * Velocity. (you can use any measurement system you like, standard or metric)
Energy (Kinetic) = 1/2 * Mass * Velocity^2 We use these metrics because they are both "conserved" when talking about a system. This is a fancy way of saying they don't go away, they just get transferred from one object to another.
Lets talk about momentum first: The momentum of the bullet gets transferred to the steel plate, and imparts a velocity on the steel plate. Therefore it slows down the bullet, speeds up the steel plate, and knocks it down. If you add the two momentums of the bullet and the steel plate, they will be equal to the original momentum of the bullet.
Here is where Penetration comes in: The difference between momentum, is that this conservation principle is simple, meaning you are always talking about momentum (I will show what I mean below when talking about energy). Therefore, you are always talking about MASS times VELOCITY. Ok. Now lets talk about INERTIA. Inertia is the resistance an object has to having it's velocity
changed. It is sort of represented in the mass of the object. If an object is moving, it will take some doing to decrease it's velocity. We typically change things through the application of FORCE
Force = Mass * accelerationOk, bear with me. So, if our bullet has a momentum = M * V when coming out of the barrel, in order for the bullet to STOP in the body, it will have to end up having a momentum of ZERO. In order to do that, since we can't change the mass, the VELOCITY will have to be changed to zero. We change the velocity of a particular mass with ACCELERATION (like slamming the pedal on your car to go from velocity 0 to velocity 60). Since from the above equation has F=M*A, this means that the tissue will have to impart a force on the bullet to stop it.
Assuming that tissue or ballistic gel will impart a standard force per inch of bullet traveled, changing the momentum to zero,
THIS is why momentum generally equates to penetration depth. Pfew! Ok, Not done yet, because I haven't talked about energy.
Right off the bat, let me point out the
squared term on the velocity in the energy equation. This is the kicker for why people get confused. Even though we are putting in the same ingredients in momentum and energy, namely mass and velocity, we are treating them differently.
The awesome but tricky thing about energy.....is that although it is conserved, the tricky bastard can change forms on you. Just look at a nuclear reaction to energy process:
Mass (E=mc^2) - Heat - Chemical - Kinetic - Electrical - Heat - Light
Mass can be converted to heat, which changes states of water chemically to produce steam which changes the speed and therefore kinetic energy of turbines which spins magnets in solenoids to produce electricity which you use to heat a filament which gives off light. AWESOME!

This is great for us sciency types who have to track all this **** as it changes forms, but it makes it a real bitch to intuitively understand where all that energy goes when something happens,
like a bullet hitting tissue.
Pretty much, when a bullet hits tissue, the energy gets transferred to all sorts of places, doing everything from expanding the bullet if it is a hollow point, to creating heat, to displacing tissue, to creating shockwaves in the tissue and blood, down to even creating cavitation bubbles by changing the phase of the liquids in a body.
Not so easy to make a definitive statement on the effect of energy on terminal ballistics now is it?

Except to be able to
generally state that more energy is better all other things being equal.
All things being equal is the kicker, since as Sam pointed out above, if you expend all your energy in three inches of fat, instead of penetrating into vital organs, the energy won't translate into what you want it to, which is "stopping power".
