So it seems "fragmenting" is a good thing and little is said about controlled expansion in hunting bullets here. I can see a fragmenting bullet having an edge when the bullet is of small diameter and 2x expansion would only mean .44 and you only have less than 80 grains of bullet to start with. The term controlled expanding and "hard bullets" is misleading as most bullets are designed to expand quickly but hold onto a percentage of weight. That is the controlled part. Leaving Mono bullets out of this argument it appears bullets that fragment to a great degree are going to throw lead particles around freely. Unless you like that wild lead metal taste occasionally not a good thing. In fact many lead cored bullets fragment to some degree, the Partition is a serious offender and yes is a good killer because of it. For years the standard thought on bullet construction was 2x expansion and 60-70% weight retention. Meaning 30-40% of the bullet turned into fragments. Today using smaller calibers that percentage has grown to 50% or more. Many of todays match style hunting bullets fragment a lot and destroy a lot of tissue, killing well. Many boat tailed hunting bullets are constructed to expand at lower velocities because the idea was to use them at longer ranges. I am a big fan of fragmenting bullets for use on things I am not planning on eating like coyotes but prefer to limit the spread of lead in the deer meat. I truly dislike mono's because of crappy performance from early Barnes designs, possibly the newer designs would be ok. This all being opined upon in a rambling manner I never had any real problems getting quick kills using standard cup and core controlled expanding bullets in diameters from 6.5 up. Had a few sketchy results with 6MM's when using them like I would a 30-06. I always considered using the .224 rounds on deer as reliable under easy shot conditions at medium ranges. Not as 400 yard wonders.