I still would love to see a collab investigating any long-term effects of using rather large firearms. Not sure this could be turned into any formal study given the limited population of 4-bore users.
@@brolohalflemming7042 while this is an anecdotalI report can confirm higher caliber guns do wear on you. I would shoot 300 Winchester Magnum and 338 Lapua Magnum on a regular basis and the sound was awful even with double hearing protection. That is before considering the recoil magnum rifles generally produce. I find myself shooting more short action and rimfire guns because I just can't tolerate the big boomers anymore.
Great video, Doctor. If you wouldn't mind a suggestion...I think it would be a kick if you visited Scott at his range sometime. Perhaps there would be others who would love to see your on-site evaluation as well as the interaction between you and Scott. He's hosted a number of folks, including the Slo-Mo guys. Not sure if it would be possible or even feasible; darn it would be a great watch!
Actually a 3 way collab with Scott and the Slo-Mo guys would be the GOAT! The doc can give frame by frame commentary captured by the guys of Scotts bullets.
@@BillWrightabc That would be an awesome and very informative collaboration. Heck, get Houston Jones to join in and the Doc can give his expert analysis of exactly what Houston went through... and how much he's going to feel it when he's 55 😉😂😂😂
In combat medicine you never put quickclot into the abdomen or chest. It’s reserved for muscular wounds. The hemolytic agent would severely skar any organs it comes in contact with. We pack with standard gauze open cavity wounds
I fired ONCE a rifle (no second amendment in my country, so if you want to own weapons and use them, you have to spend heaps of money and go throug endless hoopes) and the recoil had me LITERALLY fall onto my back. My uncle (the one who encouraged me to try it at least once) laughed about it till the day he passed away.......
Doc, this made my ribs ache! I got shot with a .40 cal hollowpoint "flying ashtray" while wearing a Level III vest several years ago in line of duty shooting. No penetration but it was as if Sammy Sosa had hung me up like a punching bag and had a bit of batting practice. Bruised spleen, bruised descending colon, 3 broken ribs, partially collapsed left lung, some bleeding into the the body cavity and a surface bruise that extended from my left clavicle to past my left hip and from midline to around the left side to the spine. Most of the damage was attributed to there not being a trauma plate in that area. I've got that vest hanging up in my man cave (a large disused walk in closet). I was grateful and appreciative that I would live another day while the assailant got a table at Cafe Autopsee. Your videos are incredible and valuable. In this age of video carnage and reset butttons youu are showing what reality can do to the body. Just keep making them and we'll keep watching them!
Sounds like a very nasty experience mate. I'm glad you're around to talk about it. I've had my own near death experience but not from a firearm. I can't deny that just reading the words Cafe Autopsee cracked me up big time.
lucky man if that had hit in the right spot i shudder to think of the repercussions still glad it did or we would not have the story reminds me of the old stories of a sheriff who got hit in the badge in the era before vests and body armor he survived and the badge has a very nice dent right in the middle interesting side not my grandfather in ww1 got shot in the chest luckily he had a steel signal mirror in his breast pocket which caused the bullet to ricochet down the inside of his left arm he got a purple heart out of it but more importantly lived regardless im glad you can share your story today on a side note the likelihood of getting shot by a .40 cal is rather low most people prefer the smokeless variety of firearms in the modern era but glad you resolved the situation id hate to get shot in the first place but id rather a .40 than a .50 if ive got a vest on going from 90 something grains of lead to 250 + is not something i think anyone would want and definitely the end for the majority
@@ferrofeles2063 A .40 cal hit today would be rather uncommon, but from about 1988 to about 2005, a large percentage of US police agencies used the .40 Smith and Wesson cartridge. H&K even had their iconic MP5 submachine gun chambered for it for a time.
I'd like to see a good old 2 bore. "This rifle was made by Holland & Holland, of Bond Street, and I could highly recommend it for the Goliath of Gath, but not for the men of A.D. 1866." Sir Samuel White Baker
What I'd give to see him HOLD a 2 bore, let alone shoot one. They are outrageously big and heavy! Also, if he got a rifled barrel for his punt gun, that would be a 1 bore rifle.
Deadpan jokes delivered with surgical precision. Seriously, thanks for the discussion on the effects of small - and large - caliber projectiles on the body.
@@ChrisRaynorMD Seconded. Also just parroting what a few others are saying, you should do a collaboration video Kentucky Ballistics. Do some live on site assessment/how you'd fix it.
You could almost do a video on the effects of recoil on the body when Kentucky Ballistics did a video with the Slow-mo Guys firing a few of KB's largest firearms.
@@The_RC_Guru I think he has mentioned it a couple of times. The Slo-mo non-camera guy (can't remember his name)--the slo-mo on his shoulder with even the 600 Nitro Express was brutal. Scott is big and it is clear he does some working out...
I watch KY ballistics & had already watched the episodes here, but this was still very interesting. Confirming Scott's diagnosis of "not good" earned a subscription.
@@lectrikdog Without armor the entire inside of the torso would have been torn to slurry by the shockwave of it traveling through. I think scott did a video of ballistics gel with the 4 bore and it basically swelled the entire block out like a balloon so harshly it broke the table from the speed of the expansion.
Part of the standard for body armor is to mitigate the transfer of force by spreading it out. It's probably the reason that all the body armor rated for rifle calibers are hard plates or hard plates backed by soft panels. The test protocol includes measuring back face deformation for exactly the reasons Scott demonstrated in his video, and that you highlight in this one.
It might be fun to look at some of the insane recoil Scott endures, maybe address some of the myths like, for example, that .500 Magnum permanently damages your hand. At the very least, some of the slow mo, especially when he had the slow mo guys out, really shows how crazy the recoil is and the strange ways the body reacts under such circumstances. The recoil pushing the bones way back, and the then the skin and muscle playing catch-up!
It is not a myth it depends on the grip, old wood with the solid steel handle that shock and recoil after pro longed use can and will damage nerves. Or if you shoot it wrong it can do it once. It’s like the vibration from sword fighting this is why gloves and leather wraps were used. To help absorb that shock, that recoil is pure hand shock. No myth about it. Now rubber and polymer modern handles well again it absorbs the shock!
I love your very intelligent commentaries, especially on this video. I've heard a few other "doctors/surgeons", at least they said, and you have impressed me sir. You have a new subscriber I'm glad I came upon your video
I absolutely love Kentucky Ballistics, and your video added a ton of intersting information to it. In addition to being how I discovered your channel. Cheers, and subscribed.
I got this in my recommended, and I gotta say, Doc, your sense of comedic timing is amazing. Also, your explanations are great for those curious. It is much appreciated. Take care now.
@@pyoodiepie I forget the exact context, never learned it in school (I'm sure that's by design), but if I recall correctly it was the Tiananmen Square Massacre, where citizens and students were protesting the CCP and it ultimately resulted in the government sending the army to break up the protest, which included literally running people over with tanks. The clip cut away, but that tank didn't stop and that person didn't take a step away from where he stood.
Well, I have seen many of these armor protective vest videos. It is astonishing how well they demonstrate the injuries on ballistic gel dummies. Your video was very informative and hilarious. As a physician, your teaching abilities are fabulous. I always remember Anatomy 101. However, your interpretation is classic. What about doing a video on motor vehicle trauma? If you have already, I will check it out. Good day, Professor! 😊😅
For those who are not regulars on Scott's channel (Kentucky ballistics). Notice that shirt how it says just stick a thumb a in it? That saying came about because on one of his videos Scott's gun exploded and a chunk of shrapnel cut his throat. Scott survived because he stuck his thumb into his carotid artery to stop bleeding.
Honestly as some others have said... Going to Scott and doing an on site diagnostics would be very fun and informative ( which Scott has said is is goal all the time ).
Your face in the thumbnail is exactly how I reacted to seeing what the soft body armour did. Then I burst out laughing and went "THAT IS SO NOT OKAY!" 🤣
I really like this video, and the style with which you explained what we, the viewer, are seeing. Pithy, entertaining and educational - I have subscribed.
Scott always garantees top quality entertainment. It´s wild the amount of punishment he´s willing to put his body through, with all that insane recoil... He really is the recoil king! I found this video super interesting. It really highlighted just how much energy, and damage these firearms does to the body
i love these videos you do, not only very educational and amusing but the way you talk and edit to make it seem like a direct collab with KB is epic, you ever thought of messaging him and seeing if he would do a real collab?
I'm glad you like the videos! I've thought about collaborating with him, but haven't gotten around to it yet. I did reach out to him about another video, but that is as far as we have gotten.
First time ever seeing your content, but I’ve watched quite a few of scott’s videos, gotta say even though I’m only a few minutes in I love the breakdowns and content so far!
Dr Chris just found your channel with Scott of Kentucky Ballistics Not only very informative but extremely entertaining Would love to see you visit with and interact with Scott
You may know this already, but for the audience's sake I want to correct something you said about combat medicine (as a first-responder). We are trained to use hemostatic gauze, specifically for hemorrhages in places that make tourniquets infeasible, but the abdominal and thoracic cavities are not among them. The way it's been rationalized is that these two areas are large cavities, and the hemostatic agent works via pressure and time. It needs to be held tightly against the bleeding artery for ~3 minutes to effectively stop the flow. These large cavities make holding effective pressure very difficult, and the amount of gauze you could stuff in there is too much. The main use for hemostatic gauze is on arterial bleeding in the groin, neck, and armpits. For chest wounds, we use chest seals and needle decompression catheters, and for open trauma to the stomach we use chest seals, bags and tape, etc.
I have been watching Kentucky Ballistics for years, but watching it from a professional point of view, it's unbelievable! Thank you for a wonderful video, Dr. Raynor!
Content about the damage caused is important, not just for interns, but as a teaching aid for range safety instructors. Thank you for doing these types of videos.
This video is awesome! I’ve already watched that Kentucky Ballistics video, & it’s awesome to watch it a second time with commentary from a doctor about medically what’s going on
Love this series, thanks Doc! I know I've said it before, but covering videos from creators I already follow helps me understand and appreciate the content at a deeper level. Keep it up! ❤
SCOTT IS THE SWEETEST BIG GUY ON THE INTERNET! Used to be state police before he became Awesome at TH-cam! Almost died for his fans once! HELL OF A GUY! Love the dickens outta him!
I’m typically not a big fan of reactions videos but this was delightful. I’m a subscriber to Kentucky ballistics and honestly this was as entertaining as the original video if not more so.
Been a while since I've watched one of your videos, and I know for sure last time you didn't have the "From a licensed doctor in Canada" there. Congrats on officially getting that on the youtube videos.
I think a fully “fleshed,” out collaboration would be very entertaining. I’d like to point out this video randomly showed up in my recommends and as a former EMT I truly enjoy the mix of content. Sometimes the algorithm works. I’m happy to subscribe.
I think you should visit Scott and have a fun time shooting some rounds and geeking out. Maybe try out one of his “floating vehicles”? It would be a great video.
One thing movies/TV tends to get wrong is the impact of the round against the armor. The hero always seems to take multiple shots to the torso and keeps on keeping on.
I really enjoyed this video! I would love it if you were to talk with scott about his injury from his .50 cal rifle catastrophically failling on him. He also has a playlist of guns failing that I think you would find very interesting and reaction worthy!
Awesome video Dr. Raynor. The results of the 4 bore seems consistent regardless of protection but hearing about the effects of the force applied is interesting. Thank you again
Kentucky Ballistics is always a great visit. I would've never predicted the bullet was too round to penetrate the armor yet continue its path without caring. But I don't know if I was definitely not bore-d or if I was totally bore-d watching this.
You really need to make a video with Scott. That would be one to watch. Thank you good sir for your videos. From an old EMT they’re always entertaining and informative.
If you want to see more content like this, be sure to let me know in the comments. 👇🏿
I still would love to see a collab investigating any long-term effects of using rather large firearms. Not sure this could be turned into any formal study given the limited population of 4-bore users.
I'm pretty sure he did something similar with the Punt Gun. That ball of lead pulled the soft armor _through_ the dummy.
Could you make a video react to Punt Gun vs Body Armor ? And 50BMG rat shot vs zombie torso by Kentucky Ballistics ?
@@brolohalflemming7042 while this is an anecdotalI report can confirm higher caliber guns do wear on you. I would shoot 300 Winchester Magnum and 338 Lapua Magnum on a regular basis and the sound was awful even with double hearing protection. That is before considering the recoil magnum rifles generally produce. I find myself shooting more short action and rimfire guns because I just can't tolerate the big boomers anymore.
you and prof kentucky should definitely do a collab some time.
Great video, Doctor. If you wouldn't mind a suggestion...I think it would be a kick if you visited Scott at his range sometime. Perhaps there would be others who would love to see your on-site evaluation as well as the interaction between you and Scott. He's hosted a number of folks, including the Slo-Mo guys. Not sure if it would be possible or even feasible; darn it would be a great watch!
Actually a 3 way collab with Scott and the Slo-Mo guys would be the GOAT! The doc can give frame by frame commentary captured by the guys of Scotts bullets.
Somebody as clean and professional as Dr. Chris would be a PERFECT guest for Kentucky Roulette.
Yes yes and yes to all of this
I would def see that, and more than once
@@BillWrightabc That would be an awesome and very informative collaboration.
Heck, get Houston Jones to join in and the Doc can give his expert analysis of exactly what Houston went through... and how much he's going to feel it when he's 55 😉😂😂😂
The good news is, the vest stopped the round.
The _bad_ news is, your sternum met your spine, and they're gonna be together for the rest of your life.
That would be max 3 min
@@mikker32 That's the joke.
Your very short life
The second good news is…… the rest of your life, won’t be very long. lol
In combat medicine you never put quickclot into the abdomen or chest. It’s reserved for muscular wounds. The hemolytic agent would severely skar any organs it comes in contact with. We pack with standard gauze open cavity wounds
Doctor: recoil can be dangerous
Kentucky ballistics: **laughs in exploding 50 cal**
There actually is a video of a guy shooting the 950 JDJ, I tink its the same one Scott now has, and the recoil actually broke one of his ribs.
Ballistic High Speed : Exploding RPG launcher. And DIDN'T laugh at all.
I fired ONCE a rifle (no second amendment in my country, so if you want to own weapons and use them, you have to spend heaps of money and go throug endless hoopes) and the recoil had me LITERALLY fall onto my back. My uncle (the one who encouraged me to try it at least once) laughed about it till the day he passed away.......
@@jorgebarriosmur what caliber? Recoil on anything up through a .416 Rigby isn't enough to do that if you have half a clue how to hold a gun.
Doc, this made my ribs ache! I got shot with a .40 cal hollowpoint "flying ashtray" while wearing a Level III vest several years ago in line of duty shooting. No penetration but it was as if Sammy Sosa had hung me up like a punching bag and had a bit of batting practice. Bruised spleen, bruised descending colon, 3 broken ribs, partially collapsed left lung, some bleeding into the the body cavity and a surface bruise that extended from my left clavicle to past my left hip and from midline to around the left side to the spine. Most of the damage was attributed to there not being a trauma plate in that area. I've got that vest hanging up in my man cave (a large disused walk in closet). I was grateful and appreciative that I would live another day while the assailant got a table at Cafe Autopsee.
Your videos are incredible and valuable. In this age of video carnage and reset butttons youu are showing what reality can do to the body. Just keep making them and we'll keep watching them!
got a table at Cafe Autopsee - that's an awesome phrase. Thank you for your service officer.
Sounds like a very nasty experience mate. I'm glad you're around to talk about it. I've had my own near death experience but not from a firearm. I can't deny that just reading the words Cafe Autopsee cracked me up big time.
Thank you for the sacrifices you’ve made to keep society safer.
God Bless you sir.
lucky man if that had hit in the right spot i shudder to think of the repercussions still glad it did or we would not have the story reminds me of the old stories of a sheriff who got hit in the badge in the era before vests and body armor he survived and the badge has a very nice dent right in the middle interesting side not my grandfather in ww1 got shot in the chest luckily he had a steel signal mirror in his breast pocket which caused the bullet to ricochet down the inside of his left arm he got a purple heart out of it but more importantly lived regardless im glad you can share your story today
on a side note the likelihood of getting shot by a .40 cal is rather low most people prefer the smokeless variety of firearms in the modern era but glad you resolved the situation id hate to get shot in the first place but id rather a .40 than a .50 if ive got a vest on going from 90 something grains of lead to 250 + is not something i think anyone would want and definitely the end for the majority
@@ferrofeles2063
A .40 cal hit today would be rather uncommon, but from about 1988 to about 2005, a large percentage of US police agencies used the .40 Smith and Wesson cartridge. H&K even had their iconic MP5 submachine gun chambered for it for a time.
dr. raynor---you should go to kentucky ballistics and make a joint video!
Kentucky would welcome it for sure! This would be a pretty epic collaboration.
I wonder if he hasn't done this before because of how busy he probably is as a Doctor on a day to day basis.
Oh yeah, that would be amazing.
Yes!!
Great idea!!
Y'all should do a collaboration with him. His and your energies would mix awesomly.
Professor Scott has more powerful kinetic launchers, including the 950 JDJ fat Mac, and a 20mm Solothurn.
And the Punt Gun.
Ill third these motions
I'd like to see a good old 2 bore.
"This rifle was made by Holland & Holland, of Bond Street, and I could highly recommend it for the Goliath of Gath, but not for the men of A.D. 1866."
Sir Samuel White Baker
@@briancox2721 not to mention the 500, 600 AND, 700 Nitro!
What I'd give to see him HOLD a 2 bore, let alone shoot one. They are outrageously big and heavy! Also, if he got a rifled barrel for his punt gun, that would be a 1 bore rifle.
Deadpan jokes delivered with surgical precision.
Seriously, thanks for the discussion on the effects of small - and large - caliber projectiles on the body.
You are welcome.
Came for space marine anatomy, stayed for my guntubers. Love the Canuck doc
🙏🙌
@@ChrisRaynorMD Seconded. Also just parroting what a few others are saying, you should do a collaboration video Kentucky Ballistics. Do some live on site assessment/how you'd fix it.
@@Canadiancoinguy I second that. Bring a little class to Kentucky lol
@@shawnflynn5391 then finish the mini series with a round of Kentucky roulette.
@@ChrisRaynorMD I`d advice against it unless you want to become the "Jake Paul" of Medicine. Good Vid though.
You could almost do a video on the effects of recoil on the body when Kentucky Ballistics did a video with the Slow-mo Guys firing a few of KB's largest firearms.
100% Scott has definitely done permanent internal damage. There’s no way he isn’t in 24/7 pain in his right shoulder socket.
@@The_RC_Guru I think he has mentioned it a couple of times. The Slo-mo non-camera guy (can't remember his name)--the slo-mo on his shoulder with even the 600 Nitro Express was brutal. Scott is big and it is clear he does some working out...
@@BillWrightabche's youtube doomguy pretty much
@@The_RC_Guru I mean, there was that whole thing where his 50. cal exploded and nearly killed him. So yes, he definitely has.
@@fennecegg8118 obviously that wasn’t what we are commenting on here.
Scott needs to have you down to the range for sure that would be a epic video
Professor Scott doing his thing in broadening our understanding of the effects of ballistic speed projectiles on the human body.
At least Scott was not the recipient of any of the projectiles in this video.
@@allens4974 This time.
I watch KY ballistics & had already watched the episodes here, but this was still very interesting. Confirming Scott's diagnosis of "not good" earned a subscription.
"He's dead, for at least a couple of reasons."😂😂
The ammunition Scott uses, Underwood, is “the good stuff”. It’s very high quality and uses the most modern projectile technology.
I was never particularly into response videos, but you successfully contributed something useful. Much better than I was expecting from a mis-click.
Glad you enjoyed it!
The fact that the body armor did still contain that round is amazing.
and with much worse results i wonder what damage without the Armor?!
@@kenlowder6932 the joys of lead rounds instead of brass solids, or lead with steel core.
@@lectrikdog Without armor the entire inside of the torso would have been torn to slurry by the shockwave of it traveling through. I think scott did a video of ballistics gel with the 4 bore and it basically swelled the entire block out like a balloon so harshly it broke the table from the speed of the expansion.
@@chrishubbard64 Yeah he did, it was nasty. The shockwave made it essential implode from the inside out.
@@lectrikdog Pretty sure there wouldn't be a recognizable spine.
As a total gun nut, this format makes learning about anatomy a blast! Keep it up, Doctor!
Getting shot with 4bore NOT ADVISABLE 😅
It would definitely be classifiable as one of THOSE days.
Armor will stop the bullet. Your body will not stop the armor.
@@DarthCiliatus That’s a fun way to put it. 😬
i concur 🧐
Hell yeah! Would also love to see you react to the late Paul Harrell's meat target as a comparison to human anatomy. Thanks for your hard work!
I wanna see that too
Part of the standard for body armor is to mitigate the transfer of force by spreading it out. It's probably the reason that all the body armor rated for rifle calibers are hard plates or hard plates backed by soft panels.
The test protocol includes measuring back face deformation for exactly the reasons Scott demonstrated in his video, and that you highlight in this one.
2 of my favorite creators in 1 video! Great Stuff!
Wow, thanks! 🙏
We need a collaboration between the Doctor, Slo Mo guys and Kentucky Ballistics... That would set all of their accounts sky rocketing...
It would definitely be science and education then.
This is a great idea, and place monitors on shoulders and upper body for recoil test on Kentucky Ballistics.
Great science experiment.💪🇺🇲
It might be fun to look at some of the insane recoil Scott endures, maybe address some of the myths like, for example, that .500 Magnum permanently damages your hand. At the very least, some of the slow mo, especially when he had the slow mo guys out, really shows how crazy the recoil is and the strange ways the body reacts under such circumstances. The recoil pushing the bones way back, and the then the skin and muscle playing catch-up!
Great suggestion!
I was going to make the same suggestion.
Do it!! Please Do It!!!!!!!
It is not a myth it depends on the grip, old wood with the solid steel handle that shock and recoil after pro longed use can and will damage nerves.
Or if you shoot it wrong it can do it once.
It’s like the vibration from sword fighting this is why gloves and leather wraps were used. To help absorb that shock, that recoil is pure hand shock. No myth about it. Now rubber and polymer modern handles well again it absorbs the shock!
I love your very intelligent commentaries, especially on this video. I've heard a few other "doctors/surgeons", at least they said, and you have impressed me sir. You have a new subscriber I'm glad I came upon your video
Thanks for watching.
Doctor Chris and Kentucky ballistics, in for a treat today.
Punt gun break down when? Dr Ballistics would approve.
Yes and someone needs to invent a vehicle mounted belt fed semi auto punt gun for anti drone duty .
I absolutely love Kentucky Ballistics, and your video added a ton of intersting information to it. In addition to being how I discovered your channel. Cheers, and subscribed.
I got this in my recommended, and I gotta say, Doc, your sense of comedic timing is amazing. Also, your explanations are great for those curious. It is much appreciated. Take care now.
This is the first video of yours that I've seen, but I really liked how you explained everything in a scientific and easy-to-understand way.
Thank you for including footage of Tiananmen Square. China has done its best to keep people from seeing what happened in June 1989.
@@jeremyortiz2927 was an insane cut🤣
West Taiwan really is at war with reality.
I remember seeing all that as it was happening. There was some good live coverage of the horrible occurances, but good luck finding any videos today.
What happened in June of 1989? I have not heard about this
@@pyoodiepie I forget the exact context, never learned it in school (I'm sure that's by design), but if I recall correctly it was the Tiananmen Square Massacre, where citizens and students were protesting the CCP and it ultimately resulted in the government sending the army to break up the protest, which included literally running people over with tanks.
The clip cut away, but that tank didn't stop and that person didn't take a step away from where he stood.
Well, I have seen many of these armor protective vest videos. It is astonishing how well they demonstrate the injuries on ballistic gel dummies.
Your video was very informative and hilarious. As a physician, your teaching abilities are fabulous. I always remember Anatomy 101. However, your interpretation is classic.
What about doing a video on motor vehicle trauma? If you have already, I will check it out.
Good day, Professor! 😊😅
I love your mix of humor and education;
Always love your firearm wound analyses. Dr. Kentucky has a 20mm now......
This is the first one of your episodes I have seen. Out standing. Looking forward to seeing more.
I love it when you break down these types of videos it's always a great watch
Awesome video. I lost track of some of your videos for a while due to life in general however, glad to have had this one come up. You never disappoint
Welcome back!
That shot on the soft armour was the equivalent of being shot with a literal cannon.
For those who are not regulars on Scott's channel (Kentucky ballistics). Notice that shirt how it says just stick a thumb a in it? That saying came about because on one of his videos Scott's gun exploded and a chunk of shrapnel cut his throat. Scott survived because he stuck his thumb into his carotid artery to stop bleeding.
Honestly as some others have said... Going to Scott and doing an on site diagnostics would be very fun and informative ( which Scott has said is is goal all the time ).
Your face in the thumbnail is exactly how I reacted to seeing what the soft body armour did. Then I burst out laughing and went "THAT IS SO NOT OKAY!" 🤣
I really like this video, and the style with which you explained what we, the viewer, are seeing. Pithy, entertaining and educational - I have subscribed.
Thanks for subscribing! I hope you enjoy future content.
Scott need to invite you to the Kentucky ballistics range❤
Scott always garantees top quality entertainment. It´s wild the amount of punishment he´s willing to put his body through, with all that insane recoil... He really is the recoil king!
I found this video super interesting. It really highlighted just how much energy, and damage these firearms does to the body
i love these videos you do, not only very educational and amusing but the way you talk and edit to make it seem like a direct collab with KB is epic, you ever thought of messaging him and seeing if he would do a real collab?
I'm glad you like the videos! I've thought about collaborating with him, but haven't gotten around to it yet. I did reach out to him about another video, but that is as far as we have gotten.
This was super interesting and very helpful in understanding the effects of this type of damage. Thank you! Keep up the great content!
Appreciate you watching!
There are some armour plates that use ceramic to disperse the force and that combined with kevlar makes it a good combo but only usable once
First time ever seeing your content, but I’ve watched quite a few of scott’s videos, gotta say even though I’m only a few minutes in I love the breakdowns and content so far!
I’m glad you’re enjoying the content!
Dr Chris just found your channel with Scott of Kentucky Ballistics Not only very informative but extremely entertaining Would love to see you visit with and interact with Scott
Welcome aboard!
Awesome video good to see another Kentucky Ballistics vid! Really informative and thanks Dr. Chris
You may know this already, but for the audience's sake I want to correct something you said about combat medicine (as a first-responder).
We are trained to use hemostatic gauze, specifically for hemorrhages in places that make tourniquets infeasible, but the abdominal and thoracic cavities are not among them. The way it's been rationalized is that these two areas are large cavities, and the hemostatic agent works via pressure and time. It needs to be held tightly against the bleeding artery for ~3 minutes to effectively stop the flow. These large cavities make holding effective pressure very difficult, and the amount of gauze you could stuff in there is too much. The main use for hemostatic gauze is on arterial bleeding in the groin, neck, and armpits. For chest wounds, we use chest seals and needle decompression catheters, and for open trauma to the stomach we use chest seals, bags and tape, etc.
I saw Kentucky ballistics in the title and have thoroughly enjoyed the attention to detail and knowledge to be gained
I have been watching Kentucky Ballistics for years, but watching it from a professional point of view, it's unbelievable! Thank you for a wonderful video, Dr. Raynor!
Content about the damage caused is important, not just for interns, but as a teaching aid for range safety instructors. Thank you for doing these types of videos.
Amazing! You should do a field trip together with Prof. Kentucky and with Prof. Thumb.
This video is awesome! I’ve already watched that Kentucky Ballistics video, & it’s awesome to watch it a second time with commentary from a doctor about medically what’s going on
Absolutely love this content. Would love to see a live collab between y'all.
Maybe one day!
Love this series, thanks Doc! I know I've said it before, but covering videos from creators I already follow helps me understand and appreciate the content at a deeper level. Keep it up! ❤
SCOTT IS THE SWEETEST BIG GUY ON THE INTERNET! Used to be state police before he became Awesome at TH-cam! Almost died for his fans once! HELL OF A GUY! Love the dickens outta him!
I’m typically not a big fan of reactions videos but this was delightful. I’m a subscriber to Kentucky ballistics and honestly this was as entertaining as the original video if not more so.
Really enjoyed this take. Great work doc
Much appreciated!
Bro, I love Kentucky Ballistics. And with you and your expertise just greatens it 10 fold! Love your analysis
Great video and I glad you finally did the video on 4 Bore Rifle Vs Body Armor.
I love how you break down to the minute details something that can be described as "mf got his back blown out, literally"
I wish your channel existed when I was learning anatomy. Thanks Doc.
Wow, thanks! 🙌🏿
6:54 - Literally the definition of "injuries incompatible with life."
This man's editor is so on point, the DBZ meme had me dying lol
It would be badass to see you all collab, Kentucky Ballistics, Ballistic High Speed and yourself ❤. Great work as always Sir, thank you.
Been a while since I've watched one of your videos, and I know for sure last time you didn't have the "From a licensed doctor in Canada" there. Congrats on officially getting that on the youtube videos.
I love BOTH channels; yours and Kentucky Ballistics. This is just pure frosting!
Loved the reaction to scotts video found a new channel to watch keep up the good work
Welcome aboard!
Calling the diaphragm compromised.. is just a bit of an understatement. Lmao
Like telling people in the path of a hurricane to expect "a spot of rain."
Chris is an awesome doctor. Thanks for the entertainment
I think a fully “fleshed,” out collaboration would be very entertaining.
I’d like to point out this video randomly showed up in my recommends and as a former EMT I truly enjoy the mix of content. Sometimes the algorithm works. I’m happy to subscribe.
Great collaboration with Dr. Ballistics i think you should do more
That's the plan!
Keep up the good work Doc. The in depth analysis is fascinating.
Love the Dr's perspective on the KB vid.
This from a L5-S1 removal; and C4-C7 fusion life. ❤
Would love to see a cold Fab between Dr Chris and Kentucky ballistics maybe on what the body goes through with impact of large recoil
Always love your analysis of Kentucky Ballistics videos
I like this style of anatomy learning. Funny, engaging and intellectual!
I think you should visit Scott and have a fun time shooting some rounds and geeking out. Maybe try out one of his “floating vehicles”? It would be a great video.
Thanks Dr. I always enjoy your videos. You pause and break down everything at the perfect timing, looking forward to more!! 👍
I wonder what you think the recoil from that rifle is doing to his shoulders
You move with the recoil & you'll be fine.
@@dr.hugog.hackenbush9443 if you are moving then your shot will not be accurate.
Instant subscription, this was both educational and comedy gold.
Welcome!
I love that he calls Scott "The Professor."
This guy is awesome. First time here.
One thing movies/TV tends to get wrong is the impact of the round against the armor. The hero always seems to take multiple shots to the torso and keeps on keeping on.
ty for sharing your expertise, us plebians appreciate the commentary !
My pleasure!
I love KB so the fact that you covered this vid is awesome and scary glad the 4 bore isn't more widely available
8:25 I was literally just about to say “I bet that could have even reached far enough to damage the spinal column”
Doctor, I always enjoy your videos, informative, entertaining, everything I want, you deliver.
I really enjoyed this video! I would love it if you were to talk with scott about his injury from his .50 cal rifle catastrophically failling on him. He also has a playlist of guns failing that I think you would find very interesting and reaction worthy!
Awesome video Dr. Raynor. The results of the 4 bore seems consistent regardless of protection but hearing about the effects of the force applied is interesting. Thank you again
You should check Scotts shoulder for damage.
Look's like an alien chestbuster in reverse.
Kentucky Ballistics is always a great visit. I would've never predicted the bullet was too round to penetrate the armor yet continue its path without caring. But I don't know if I was definitely not bore-d or if I was totally bore-d watching this.
Love the 3D modeling of the human anatomy while you explain!
Awesome to see a doc talk about "true ribs" vs. the false ones we have lol. Great video
Glad you enjoyed!
I love that you broke this down - I am a huge fan or yours and Scott - I mean Dr Kentucky!!!
You really need to make a video with Scott. That would be one to watch. Thank you good sir for your videos. From an old EMT they’re always entertaining and informative.