No. I am just pointing out that if you want the bullet fragment, after hitting the asphalt, to fall 13.7 feet vertically over a horizontal range of 250 feet, (and then fall another 6.8 feet over the next 141 ft) it can’t be travelling much more than 300 fps after hitting the asphalt.
I took into account the loss of energy due to air resistance. The muzzle speed was 2165 fps or 660 m/s so the 10g.bullet initially had mv^2/2 energy=(.005(660)^2)=2,178 J. Just before hitting the road it had slowed to 2000 fps due to air resistance. So its energy on impact with the road was .005(610)^2=1,860 J. Upon hitting the road, the bullet fragmented but all fragments kept moving slowly enough to fall 13.7 feet over a range of 250 feet which means it had an average speed of 270 fps.
Even if it was moving at 440 fps (134 m/s) after hitting the road and slowed to 100 fps just before hitting the manhole (but then it could not have hit the road near Tague 141 ft away) that means it had retained only (134/610)^2=0.05=5% of its original energy. So it deposited 95% of its 1860 Joules of energy (1767 J) in colliding with the road. I am saying it was a bit more than that - about 1800 J.
Andrew, you are trying to over-simplify more than one aspect. And you are trying to compare apples to oranges. Your methods do not work for this application. I understand the physics behind firing a bullet level and dropping a bullet straight down and they both hit a level surface at the same time. You are trying to specify a slower velocity for the fragment to give it enough time to drop 13.7-feet. However that is simply not the situation we are faced with in this case.
First of all, as I have already explained, the fragment leaves the surface of Elm Street at a negative 2-degrees angle (not level). Therefore, at a distance of 250-feet it is going to be at an elevation that is 8.7-feet lower than it was at the Elm Street mark without any help from gravity due to simple geometry. Also, unlike the dropped bullet, due to the downward component of the direction (-2-degrees) of the fragment's velocity when it leaves the Elm Street mark the fragment is not starting from zero vertical velocity.
So the fragment only needs to drop approximately 5-feet due to gravity (not 13.7-feet). Plus it has a "running start" compared to a dropped bullet. You can compute all of this if you wish. However, I will likely continue to believe the ballistic calculators.