No I still say your expectations were unrealistic and had you read up and understood the design characteristics of the bullet you'd have known before firing it that it was not going to meet your expectations.
If we go to the presumed experts on the Hornady 7mm 162g BTSP , Hornady themselves, we find that they classify the bullet as suitable for both “Medium” and “Large” game and Hornady loads their 7mm RM ammo with this bullet to 2940fps, only 10fps slower than my load. “Large” game, same bullet, same velocity... Yeah, my expectations were WAY out of line...
If the 2700fps you cite is the magic number for that bullet, the Hornady ammo is NFG inside 135 yards...
I can expect that I'll wake up a billionaire tomorrow morning but my expecting it ain't gonna make it happen cuz it's not realistic same as you assuming you can bust thru that critter at that velocity with that light of a Hornady Interlock, just ain't happening in this life time.
If you expect to wake up a billionaire tomorrow, I’d say those expectations are completely ungrounded in reality.
On the other hand, I had seen that same bullet “bust through” several critters, both deer and elk, before I took my elk two years after I started hunting with the group – my mentor and a couple others in my hunting group were using it and recommending it. My mentor was using exact same the same load I used - in fact that’s where I got it, so I had a solid basis in reality for my expectations. Besides, I wasn’t concerned about an exit to begin with – I just thought the InterLock bullet would hold together better.
The Speer Grand Slam is and since it's beginning been listed as a premium bullet not a standard cup and core bullet even tho of cup and core design. Like other hot core bullets it is a more or less bonded bullet and has an other than pure lead core as well as a thicker jacket designed to retain more weight than the Hornady.
There is no law that required Hornady to use soft lead as the core material for their bullets, and if you’ve ever peeled a Grand slam apart, as I have, you will find there is no bonding between the cup and the core.
The Hornady InterLock retained its jacket so the big difference was in weight retention.
Use bullets within their design limits and they will do as promised. Use them outside the design limits and with expectations that are not realistic and you'll not get the results you expect. That doesn't constitute bullet failure merely unrealistic expectations. Knowing the difference: Priceless.
Apparently Hornady doesn’t understand the limitations of their 7mm 162g BTSP as they load it to essentially the same velocity I did, circa 2950fps, in the same cartridge, the 7mm RM. Next time I go to the store I’ll see if Hornady has a label on their ammo warning hunters not to take shots inside 135 yards...
For myself, I’ll stick with the TTSX, MRX, North Fork, A-Frame, and AccuBond bullets for my bolt guns knowing the bullets are good from the muzzle to as far as I’d care to shoot.
And as I said – when I’m behind the trigger I’ll set the level of expected performance – if a bullet can’t hack it, it fails. Lots of bullet DO make the grade, though, including TSX, TTSX, MRX, North Fork, A-Frame, Partition, Grand Slam and AccuBond – and those are just the ones I’ve used.