Ray B
AH legend
The sectional density is a measure of the average length of the bullet. It isn't the actual length because instead of being a barrel shaped cylinder bullets are pointed, The penetration of a bullet will be the result of the force pushing the bullet, the toughness of the media through which the bullet is traveling, and in effect, the ballistic coefficient, or amount of traction the bullet has against the media. I know I lost a few with the term ballistic coefficient because some are so tied to the term regarding the bullet shape prior to impact. But The aspects of bullet shape as it travels through media has a very significant effect on how far it travels. A pointed FMJ that distorts little on impact ill tend to slice its way through and will have very little traction on the media- so it will travel a great distance but will have little effect on disrupting media. An expanding bullet that on impact distorts into something of a mushroom shape, larger frontal surface area, flatter, perpendicular to the direction of travel will have more traction on the media and will need to push the media out of its way as it penetrates. As such the penetration will be less, but the effect on the media will be much more.
To answer your question: it's an equation- the .30 has more weight which is more force potential, but it also has more frontal area so has less penetration potential. The .27 has the opposites. Since they have characteristics that are somewhat a wash, the actual penetration will be a result of which bullet has the least resistance in it's particular flight path.
To answer your question: it's an equation- the .30 has more weight which is more force potential, but it also has more frontal area so has less penetration potential. The .27 has the opposites. Since they have characteristics that are somewhat a wash, the actual penetration will be a result of which bullet has the least resistance in it's particular flight path.