John "Pondoro" Taylor, an ivory hunter who over his career shot over 1,000 elephants along with a variety of other African game and who is renowned for writing two books about rifles and cartridges for African hunting, devised the Taylor KO factor to place a mathematical value on the concussive effects a cartridge and bullet would have on an elephant, specifically from a shot to the head when the brain is missed, a "knock out" meaning the elephant was sufficiently stunned by the hit that it would not immediately turn on the hunter or flee. First describing the Taylor KO Factor as "knock out value" or "strike energy" in his
African rifles and cartridges, Taylor wrote that
muzzle energy is "surely the most misleading thing in the world", that it is too dependent on muzzle velocity instead of bullet weight and that it is "quite useless if you are trying to compare any two rifles from the point of view of the actual punch inflicted by the bullet" which according to him is more affected by the bullet's weight. In
African rifles and cartridges Taylor compares the effect of a near miss of an elephant's brain from a frontal head shot with the
.416 Rigby and the
.470 Nitro Express, two cartridges with similar muzzle energy but different bullet weights. Taylor states that the .416 Rigby will probably not knock the elephant out, but momentarily stun the animal which will recover quickly if not dispatched immediately, while the same shot delivered by the .470 Nitro Express will render the elephant unconscious for up to five minutes. Further, Taylor writes that the
.577 Nitro Express will knock an elephant unconscious for around 20 minutes, the
.600 Nitro Express around half an hour. The Taylor KO factor conforms to the observations and experiences of Taylor who, along with other very successful elephant hunters such as
Deaf Banks,
Pete Pearson and
Jim Sutherland, preferred large heavy bore rifles for elephant hunting in close country. ==Criticism==