...it would be even funnier if they used a non-enlarged photo of that .22LR in their article!
Brian
It was a .22 short, even smaller!
...it would be even funnier if they used a non-enlarged photo of that .22LR in their article!
Brian
You know, I was watching "Cops" one time where this extremely obese guy got shot with a .22. He was talking to the cops, laughing like it was no big deal. The round had just, no sh1t, bounced off of him. I laughed my ass off.
That's some freaky stuff. You know, I heard of a Huey pilot in Vietname getting hit with the same bullet multiple times. The round supposedly entered the helo through the lower window by the foot, then went in through the foot, shin, thigh, lower arm and shoulder in one line due to how he was sitting. I've been wondering if that was possible or if it was just some BS story. Anyone else heard of this?
Depends on the bullet. Bullets with enough mass and forward velocity could theoretically do it. That's a lot of entry points though.
Yeah, I saw that one. Guess it's all possible.
Ok, so I know this is from a TV show, but...
I saw a show about the Kennedy assasination where they recreated the shot with the same rifle and ballistic gel (which simulates human tissue) and the round went in and out of several pieces of ballistic gel, similar to the situation Zilch described. Obviously it would have to be a high velocity round to do that.
That's some freaky stuff. You know, I heard of a Huey pilot in Vietname getting hit with the same bullet multiple times. The round supposedly entered the helo through the lower window by the foot, then went in through the foot, shin, thigh, lower arm and shoulder in one line due to how he was sitting. I've been wondering if that was possible or if it was just some BS story. Anyone else heard of this?
That was one magic loogie.
Brett
My dad said he saw a guy who had gotten shot in Vietnam, where the bullet had entered in his shoulder and exited out of his thigh.
That's freakin gnarly.