Since the disscussion went on about light bullets vs heavy bullets and the need for a heavier bullet to effectively take a deer sized animal here is what I had happen to me Tuesday.
I shot a buck with my .270 using 130 grain Winchester power points.
The deer was only slightly quartering toward me from left to right, at approx. 150 yards.
I put the crosshairs just behind the shoulder after he stopped when I grunted at him.
I hit him, and he hunched up and kicked and ran almost all the way toward me and piled up, for a total of at least 100+ yards.
The bullet didn't pass through, but stayed in the animal.
It took out a couple of ribs and one lung on the right side, clipped the kidney, and lodged in the left hip.
After I processed the animal I found two pieces of bullet. The mushroomed jacket was in the hip bone joint, and the lead core had seperated and ended up in the ham.
I wasn't really impressed with the results of the Winchester power point, but I've had excellent results up until now.
The bottom line is I got the deer, although no blood trail I found the animal because I saw it fall within sight, and the bullet did it's job, but given the fact it was a .270 and a 130 grain bullet I think I should have at least got a pass through, and not that extreme a deflection.
Would the .243 have faired better with the same conditions, with 80 grians?