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I agree with your assessment but the .44 ball was also noted for it's ability as a horse killer as well as man stopper. The .36 Pattersen used by the Texas rangers was a real game changer against the Apache and Comanche then when the rangers got a brace of Walkers it was over for the Indians which were .44 caliber. It was found that the .44 caliber ball did not need a 50 grain charge to be effective on horses so the mass and weight of the Walker and smaller Dragoons could be reduced even more to the size and weight of the 60 Colt and still get the job done.This was all still while the ball was the preeminent projectile from my understanding.There isn't much penetrating going on to get to human vitals.
Look at the human torso and think about it in terms of how the projectiles behave.
At revolver distances round ball is the lighter and faster projectile.
So let's say you have a relatively blunt projectile going faster* than a slower pointy one.
Which one is more likely to do the most grievous damage towards stopping someone more quickly?
It's a no brainer.
There's another factor in this that I became well acquainted with when hunting with revolvers. Not big game with big powerful pistols but pot meat with slow soft lead. It's the meat and bone of the animal that gets pushed aside that causes the greater damage and a blunt nose with a little extra velocity means noticeably greater damage. That means that before it slows down a faster moving round ball creates greater trauma than a slower streamlined bullet. And the ball just didn't have to penetrate very far to get to a man's vitals.
*Think rate of displacement, like cubic inches per second.
The Colt was the most numerous into the Civil War years but the Remington became the more sought after because of it's greater strength and accuracy later in the war.