Yes, a .50 caliber bullet can still cause serious injury or death if it misses its intended target and hits a person. The impact and force of the bullet can cause significant damage to the body, potentially leading to fatal injuries.
Yes, a .50 caliber bullet can still cause lethal damage even if it misses its intended target due to its high velocity and energy.
No, a .50 caliber weapon cannot kill without hitting the target. The bullet must make physical contact with the target in order to cause harm or death.
Yes, a .50 BMG round can cause lethal injuries even if it does not hit the target directly due to its high velocity and energy transfer upon impact.
No, butterflies do not have venom that can harm or kill humans.
No, thieves do not effectively kill germs.
Yes, a .50 caliber bullet can still cause lethal damage even if it misses its intended target due to its high velocity and energy.
No, a .50 caliber weapon cannot kill without hitting the target. The bullet must make physical contact with the target in order to cause harm or death.
Yes, any bullet of any caliber can be lethal.
It will kill someone
It depends on the bullet and its kinetic energy, 50 caliber certainly can.
Up to 1,000 yards, though it will cleanly kill most game animals at any distance that you can place the bullet on target. Bert H.
He never misses his target, he's a one shot man
It all depends on the hit. Some hits, it can. Others, it won't.
It's main purpose is to fire a .45 caliber bullet which, in turn, will kill or wound any one who happens to be its' line of fire.
This question depends on the bullet, trajectory, and placement. Personally, I would never take a .223 caliber rifle against a deer. It does not have the penetration or mass of the bullet to make a good shot. Now back to the question, yes it could but it is highly unrecommended. Technically, a 22lr could kill a deer, but that is a less that 0.05% chance! Use a .308 or 30-06 caliber rifle!
You need a silver bullet to kill a werewolf.
Yes. It's actually quite hard to fire absolutely straight up, the bullet will usually take off at a certain angle, a trajectory. And with a bit of bad luck, that bullet may end up killing someone as far as three miles(depending on the caliber) away from where it's fired. It's good practise never ever to fire a gun unless you know exactly where the bullet is going to end up.