Deer Rifles vs Body Armor 🦌 - Summary

Summary

The video features Scott from Kentucky Ballistics testing Premier Body Armor Level 4 plates against various deer hunting calibers. The first plate is shot with a Remington 7400 (.270 Winchester), a Savage Axis (6.5 Creedmoor), a Brownells BRN-10 (.308), and a Ruger American (.30-06). Despite being hit multiple times, the plate holds up until the .30-06 shot, which causes significant damage but still doesn't penetrate the back of the plate.

A new plate is then set up and shot with a Remington Model 783 (.300 Winchester Magnum) and a Savage 111 (.338 Lapua). The plate holds up against these shots but eventually fails after being hit with a 338 Lapua 300 grain boat tail hollow point. The video concludes with Scott testing the plate's limits, eventually causing it to fail after being hit with multiple .338 Lapua rounds.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. The video features a test of Premier Body Armor Level 4 plate against various deer hunting calibers.
2. The Level 4 plate is rated to stop up to 30-06 armor-piercing rounds.
3. The first round fired was a 270 Winchester from a Remington 7400 rifle.
4. The 270 Winchester round did not make it through the back of the plate.
5. The second round fired was a 6.5 Creedmoor from a Savage Axis bolt-action rifle.
6. The 6.5 Creedmoor round did not make it through the back of the plate.
7. The third round fired was a 308 Winchester from a Brownells BRN-10 rifle.
8. The 308 Winchester round did not make it through the back of the plate.
9. The fourth round fired was a 30-06 Springfield from a Ruger American bolt-action rifle.
10. The 30-06 Springfield round did not make it through the back of the plate but caused significant damage to the plate.
11. The fifth round fired was a 300 Winchester Magnum from a Remington Model 783 rifle.
12. The 300 Winchester Magnum round did not make it through the back of the plate but caused a blowout.
13. The sixth round fired was a 338 Lapua from a Savage 111 Long Range Hunter rifle.
14. The 338 Lapua round did not make it through the back of the plate but caused significant damage to the plate.
15. The plate was tested with multiple rounds and showed signs of wear and tear but still managed to stop most of the rounds.
16. The final round fired was a 338 Lapua 300-grain boat tail hollow point, which finally made it through the plate.