........As an engineer who has spent time reading the peer reviewed literature there is almost nothing in this post that does not contradict the science of ballistics. Go read Mas Ayoob on the real street cases he has reviewed where good guys are injured by pass throughs. this was all settled in the 70's and 80's when LEos quit using FMJ in spite of political pressure against HP ammo.
All bullets lose energy to their surroundings all the time; barrel friction, air resistance and then to whatever they hit.
Think of a bullet hitting a steel plate it DUMPS its energy into the steel plate and knocks it over or if is a 556 it generates enough HEAT to burn a hole through the plate. It is all about friction, surface area and the yield point of the material being hit.
Say what, now?
You had me up to that point. I can agree with your first part about losing energy from the point of ignition onward........but,
2800 degree Fahrenheit .22 bullets melting through?Lost me there.
A bullet acts for a fraction of a second. Rapid deceleration enhances this force. A bullet's force acts proportionally to how resistant the target is to its forward travel.
When a bullet hits steel it starts building force at it's leading edge.... until something yields: Either the plate gets knocked over, or the bullet punches through.
The fact that a bullet may act for only a split second does not discount the tremendous force that can accumulate. The same cannot be said when you are trying to melt something. The faster the work is done the greater the energy needs are.
You would think that a "faster" bullet would be more likely generate "melting" heat. IMO, the fast bullet is actually less likely to transfer heat to a target it will ultimately penetrate because it has even less time to act.
It's more like punching a hole in a sheet of tin with a hammer and nail....just with a bullet, the force is applied at a higher rate.What happens when you shoot into heavy paper, say a phone book. It's clear that high heat is not needed for penetration. I've never set a book on fire with a bullet.
I am vaguely aware of a depleted uranium tipped round that our military has that may generate 'melting heat' when it pierces thick tank armor. But I believe the difference is in the ultra high speed (energy), tremendously dense mass and thick steel. The melting actually does not start till the projectile is well into the thick steel.
Shoot a hole in a steel plate and then go touch the plate immediately after the shot. The plate will not be hot enough to indicate that the hole was melted through. It takes a lot of heat to melt through a plate and a bit of time even with a cutting torch, also remember that the lead melts at a lower temperature than does steel......... so the core of the bullet would be molten and the jacket would split and the lead splatter on impact. JMHO.....
I am not a scientist, and I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night........
YMMV.
*Momentum is a bitch, though.