
Here you see Tia retrieving the fox and you can see her trying to keep away from those teeth!
I will explain why I don't rate ft/lbs of any value in determining a bullets performance.
This fox wieghed about 14lbs so lets multiply that by 20=280lbs or if you like a good deer.
I think the pellet had 7ft/lbs in it at 30yds so lets times that by 20=140ft/lbs so a 22 mag is all we need boys to get deer with, no?
All you got to do is get something to go from one side of the lungs to the other and preferably out the other side, now I don't care if it is a 32/20 or a remultrabrightmagnum but forget ft/lbs, just forget'm. Over here somebody has advised the police licencing of guns that a 22 has not really got enough ft/lbs to reliably take fox and so don't really allow one for the shooting of fox's, you have to go bigger

I have been told many many times that you need a margin ft/lb wise to allow for a bad shot and spent many an hour looking for fox's and deer that have walked of with their guts trailing behind them!
My point is boys, use your levers with them old slow cartridges. Don't worry about wound channel size or shape. Don't quiver at the thought of your buddy having twice as many ft/lbs just get on with it and trust your instinct as a hunter and not on the latest gimmick

Psalm ch8.
Because I wish I could!