Could easily test this Scott. Find a load cell, attach it to the paddle of the target, and get to testing!
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...Pellets traditionally have a rounded nose, or at least most of what is used for FT, while slugs tend to come to somewhat of a point. The slug is imparting a greater point load to the target due to its smaller nose diameter and residual energy.
If you are trying to understand how much energy a pellet dumps in a critter when it PASSES through said critter, then again you are working on a very hard problem.
If you are trying to understand how much energy a pellet dumps in a critter when it PASSES through said critter, then again you are working on a very hard problem.
Provided the pellet remains in one piece, and we know V1 and V2 (entry and exit), don't we have a pretty good idea how much energy was dumped in the critter?
How many bones broken? What direction did it traverse? Did it tumble? How much did the projectile deform? Did bone fragments become secondary projectiles and also exit?
In all cases when the projectile does not exit the problem becomes trivial. I think?