Your right, but not that's not necessarily going to happen all the time. The .22 LR and the military .223/5.56 are both notorious for not leaving an exit hole. Granted the .223/5.56 has enough power behind to go in and out, especially using FMJ bullets like the military does, but when using hollow points the chance of that happening drop significantly do to the bullet losing so much velocity as it expands. Then there is the fact that regardless of the type of bullet used ( ie FMJ, hollow point, etc) due to the speed and small size of the projectile they have just as much tendency to simply hit bone and bounce and tumble around inside the body, and expending their energy that way, as they do of making an in and immediate out exit. For a .223 the tumble and bounce is less likely to happen at close range than for a .22 LR, but it can still happen. Unfortunately for the victim, at close range, the in might be at the chest and the out might be down at the ankle depending on what it hits and how it bounces. The .22 might not be powerful to bounce and travel that far inside the body, but it still has enough to bounce and tumble and cause major internal damage to more than one vital organ without exiting at all.
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Today's Featured Article - The Ferguson System Principal An implement cutting through the soil at a certain depth say eight inches requires a certain force or draft to pull it. Obviously that draft will increase if the implement runs deeper than eight inches, and decrease if it runs shallower. Why not use that draft fact to control the depth of work automatically? The draft forces are
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