There certainly is some amusing speculation in this thread. This might give some insight into the viability/safety of doing what was suggested.
From the late '40s for about two decades, New Zealand had a -major-problem with feral deer destroying vegetation leading to serious land erosion. The Govt paid professional cullers to control numbers and they shot literally millions. For at least a decade, the shooters largely used ex-mil SMLE .303s with 174gr FMJ mil ammo. These of course pencilled through many deer leading to poor killing power. Many cullers took to filing off the tips of the FMJs and some even drilled them afterwards. The rough guys would just whack a chunk off the tip with side cutters! It was a common and safe way of improving the killing power.
As a kid and before I could afford a commercial hunting rifle, we used .303s on deer. I made a little jig to drill ~1/16" hollow points. It was just a plate with a tapered hole with pilot hole of that size. You'd file ~ 1/8" off the tip then drill the hole. It definitely improved terminal performance. Accuracy wasn't noticeably affected. I thought it was well known that bullets are somewhat tolerant of nose asymmetries but highly intolerant of base asymmetries.
From the late '40s for about two decades, New Zealand had a -major-problem with feral deer destroying vegetation leading to serious land erosion. The Govt paid professional cullers to control numbers and they shot literally millions. For at least a decade, the shooters largely used ex-mil SMLE .303s with 174gr FMJ mil ammo. These of course pencilled through many deer leading to poor killing power. Many cullers took to filing off the tips of the FMJs and some even drilled them afterwards. The rough guys would just whack a chunk off the tip with side cutters! It was a common and safe way of improving the killing power.
As a kid and before I could afford a commercial hunting rifle, we used .303s on deer. I made a little jig to drill ~1/16" hollow points. It was just a plate with a tapered hole with pilot hole of that size. You'd file ~ 1/8" off the tip then drill the hole. It definitely improved terminal performance. Accuracy wasn't noticeably affected. I thought it was well known that bullets are somewhat tolerant of nose asymmetries but highly intolerant of base asymmetries.
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