Kinda feel like this is some make believe modern art. The physics involved, supersonic speeds, thousands of RPMs, just don't add up. Maybe they're both steel core, but still think they'd disintegrate upon contact. Also no striations on the copper looking projectile
Yeah, that's gotta be impossible. The bullet would still be moving very fast when the one collided into the side. It wouldn't just perfectly punch through it. It would have scraped down the side, not punch a perfect hole directly through the exact point where it contacted it.
I don't know the composition not these bullets but they don't seem to be lead/copper. They wouldn't have ended up like this if they were.
I'm not saying a bullet didn't hit another one, it just doesn't seem like they were BOTH in motion, especially since there doesn't seem to be any marks in the impacted bullet from the rifling.
Kinda feel like this is some make believe modern art. The physics involved, supersonic speeds, thousands of RPMs, just don't add up. Maybe they're both steel core, but still think they'd disintegrate upon contact. Also no striations on the copper looking projectile
this is not what a bullet looks like when it hits something
Yeah, that's gotta be impossible. The bullet would still be moving very fast when the one collided into the side. It wouldn't just perfectly punch through it. It would have scraped down the side, not punch a perfect hole directly through the exact point where it contacted it.
I don't know the composition not these bullets but they don't seem to be lead/copper. They wouldn't have ended up like this if they were.
I'm not saying a bullet didn't hit another one, it just doesn't seem like they were BOTH in motion, especially since there doesn't seem to be any marks in the impacted bullet from the rifling.
Yep https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2015/05/04/bullets-collided-mid-air/
I'm think someone put their gun to a bullet on the ground lol.
Make some easy money at a museum later.
RPMS? I didn't realize bullets had engines