Got some critters down with these 208's.
Two doe pronghorn, got two different range samples, one at 92 yards, and one at 545. First was 92.
Was driving out to a field I had permission on, and about half a mile before the field this doe stood up off the right side of the 2 track road. I expected her to run, but after watching her for a second, she just stood there, so I grabbed my rifle from the passenger seat, unfolded the stock as I stepped out, put ear plugs in, walked to the front of the vehicle behind the hood and chambered a round, stood up and took my shot off hand. As the shot broke I saw the crosshairs perfectly tight behind the shoulder, down low on the heart (in wyoming, you can shoot from a 2 track dirt road as long as you are outside of your vehicle, just not on any county road, state or main highway) I heard the impact and saw her rare up and start running on just her back legs, and disapoear in the little gully below where she was bedded. I chambered another round and walked over, but I was confident what I would find.
She ran about 20 yards in a sprint and tumbled. Impact velocity was 2835, perfect broadside heart shot, however it was so violent upon impact that it ruptured the diagram and the stomach, and blew stomach contents out of the exit wound, even though it was nowhere near the stomach. Goats are pretty light built critters.....exit hole in hide was roughly 1.5", but due to stomach contents being blown out the exit contaminating the meat, as well as heavy bloodshot, I lost about half of the exit side shoulder. Entrance side was only bloodshot for an inch or so around the entrance, lost almost nothing on that side.
Exit -
Entrance -
Internal entrance -
Internal exit -
Second doe was 545. Spotted a group of three bedded in another field I have permission on, drove on the road out to a big haystack, and climbed up on top of a 4x4x8 alfalfa bale for the shot. There was a slight 3 o'clock wind that I should have held just a little bit for, it hit about 2" back from where I was aiming. Shooting at bedded animals is deceiving, you need to aim much lower than you would think, when they lay down they essentially roll back, if you aim center body you will hit spine, if you hit much higher you run a risk of grazing off their back. I held about 2" off the ground on this shot, you will see impact. As the shot broke I got back on in time to see impact, I saw dust come up behind her, and the impact nearly roll her over. She managed to stand up, ran about 50 yards slowly, and stop. At this point I could see my exit in the scope, watched her, she did the typical stumble, catch herself, and stumble again and she was down. Shot took out the back of the lungs and part of the liver, but did not rupture the stomach, it all came out very clean, much much better than the 92 yard doe, and what I would consider optimal performance. Impact velocity was 2393.
Entrance -
Exit -
Internal damage -
Entrance hide off -
Exit, hide off -
I did that last one to show that there was actually no real meat loss even on exit, there appeared to be bloodshot under the rib meat, but once the rib meat was trimmed off, the bloodshot between the outer layer and the ribs was a little jelly that just washed/scraped off, and accounted for no noteable meat loss, not even a hint of bloodshot in the backstrap that was up against the exit, so at this range on this animal, performance was stellar, absolutely perfect. Also note, the entrance was actually between ribs, so the bullet expanded properly with very little initial resistance.
I have one more buck pronghorn, one mule deer and two elk left for this season, so testing is not complete for me yet, however it is off to a good start. If most of your shots are in under 300 yards, I might look to a heavier constructed bullet, as meat loss was on the heavy side in close. My average pronghorn is 500ish yards or farther, so for me, they are about optimal this close goat was an abnormality. Mule deer and elk are usually even farther for me. More to come!