It would kill you although the chances of a bullet returning to earth at the precise spot you fired from would be very unlikely.
That would depend on the mass of the bullet, the bullet's velocity when it left the barrel of the gun, and from how high up the bullet was fired from.
I beleive the main difference is the WATTS.The Magic Bullet originally came out as a 350 WATT unit and was then down-graded to a 200 WATT.The NUTRI-BULLET has 600 WATTS of power.And the NUTRI BULLET cost twice as much...
up then down.
If you have incredible aim and like lightening fast reflexes, then i guess its possible, but i would say its pretty much impossible, or you would have to get like 1 and 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 lucky to stop a bullet with another bullet
A rubber bullet because a stell one would have too much momentum and shatter the bottle.
In the days of the muzzle loading rifle, the bullet had to be pushed down the barrel. When black powder is burned, it leaves "fouling", or gunk, behind. If a snug fitting bullet was pushed into the fouling, it would stick, and not go down the barrel. Even with a clean barrel, the bullet had to be hammered down the barrel, causing very slow loading times. This was addressed with the creation of the Minie bullet- smaller diameter, with a hollow skirt at the rear. The smaller bullet would fit down the barrel- but on firing, the hollow base expanded, gripping the rifling, causing the bullet to spin on the way out.
No, if you neck down a case to accept a new caliber bullet, or "wildcat" a round, you must re-barrel the firearm to the new caliber and have a new chamber made to ensure proper head spacing. If you neck a casing down and use the same barrel and chamber you are going to have hot pressurized gas escaping around the case and the bullet. This can be absolutely disastrous if not deadly!
Down and Dirty - 2007 Bullet for My Valentine was released on: USA: 2008
No the full speed of the bullet would be when it is fired, once the bullet travels along the barrel and exits the muzzle it is already slowing
125 grains has been a common and popular .357 bullet since at least the 1970's. Police departments using the magnum often specified this weight, on the grounds that the expanded bullet would less frequently perforate a body and cause injury down-range (than a heavier bullet would.)
A .325 WSM should be your smallest, or .308 with AP tip. The Ideal bullet would be a .220 grain ACT Winchester .338. Or a .338 Lapua Magnum
If we consider the bullets of same size,then rubber bullet having less density will have higher velocity and higher kinetic energy than that of lead bullet.Thus rubber bullet can impart more energy.Hence this would be more effective.