Muhammad Danish
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Which bullet of same momentum is more effective in knocking a bear down? Lead bullet or rubber bullet?
The discussion revolves around the effectiveness of lead versus rubber bullets in stopping a bear, focusing on the implications of momentum, penetration, and impact. Participants explore theoretical and practical aspects of bullet behavior upon impact with a bear.
Participants express differing views on the effectiveness of lead versus rubber bullets, with no consensus reached on which is definitively more effective in stopping a bear. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing perspectives.
Participants note that assumptions about mass and speed significantly affect the discussion, and practical factors such as bullet design and real-world performance are acknowledged but not fully resolved.
What do you think, and why?Muhammad Danish said:Which bullet of same momentum is more effective in knocking a bear down? Lead bullet or rubber bullet?
Lead bullet, because it will not compress on hitting the bear whereas rubber bullet will compress..phinds said:What do you think, and why?
I think it's a matter of the rubber bullet not only compressing but rebounding slightly whereas the lead bullet will put all of its momentum into the bear.Muhammad Danish said:Lead bullet, because it will not compress on hitting the bear whereas rubber bullet will compress..
Muhammad Danish said:bullet of same momentum
The explanation in post #5 suggests that the sign of the result is irrelevant. It is the magnitude of the momentum transfer which matters. That explanation plays pretty fast and loose with signs, but as long as you plug speeds in where velocities are called for, it gets the magnitude of the result right.russ_watters said:Careful here guys; if this is theoretical and the mass is the same and the rubber bullet bounces, then its final momentum is negative, not positive and the momentum transfer therefore is...
Would it not be necessary to take into account the fact that the rubber bullet deforms the bears outer layers, which spring back, but the bullet drives a shock deeper into the body and there's little to no bounce-back. I realize I might not be thinking this through properly, so this is not a rhetorical question.russ_watters said:Careful here guys; if this is theoretical and the mass is the same and the rubber bullet bounces, then its final momentum is negative, not positive and the momentum transfer therefore is...
It appears that the intended result is that the lead bullet passes through the bear while the (larger, more massive, less dense, lower velocity, lower energy but same momentum) rubber bullet fails to penetrate and ultimately bounces back.phinds said:Would it not be necessary to take into account the fact that the rubber bullet deforms the bears outer layers, which spring back, but the bullet drives a shock deeper into the body and there's little to no bounce-back. I realize I might not be thinking this through properly, so this is not a rhetorical question.
Oh, well under that assumption I don't see how there can be any question that the rubber bullet has more body impact, but that's not the assumption I would make. Bear are big damn things.jbriggs444 said:It appears that the intended result is that the lead bullet passes through the bear while the (larger, more massive, less dense, lower velocity, lower energy but same momentum) rubber bullet fails to penetrate and ultimately bounces back.
Well yes. The momentum of the projectile is not the thing that will successfully stop a charging bear.phinds said:Oh, well under that assumption I don't see how there can be any question that the rubber bullet has more body impact, but that's not the assumption I would make. Bear are big damn things.