Hunting in eastern PA., on well used state game lands, if you don't drop a deer quick, by time you get to it someone else will be gutting it. I took a doe this year using a Horn. 350 RNSP bullet. She was walking at a brisk pace through very heavy brush, about 45 yards away, and down a hill about 40 foot higher than she was. The bullet entered high on her right shoulder, and exited low on the left side of her neck. Very little meat damage, a lot of blood loss through the exit hole, and some blood under the membrane on the hit shoulder. The bullet never encountered a bone. She was knocked off her feet and never got back up. After exiting the doe, the bullet hit a 5" tree, splitting it in half before it burried itself in the ground. The bullet took out her windpipe and a large artery in her neck. Not what you call an ideal double lung/heart shot, but it worked fine. With an elastic nylon cartridge holder on the stock, reloading was very quick, but proved unnecessary. Just a note here on the benefit of an ejector, this quick of a reload would not have been possible with an extractor. I wish I could have recovered the spent bullet, but either way it did it's job. I used Varget powder, I think it was 58.0gr.
Don