I have three excellent .44 bullets.
1. THE classic Keith (Mihec mould for the H&G #503 weighs 250 grs and will keep most shots on a playing card at 100 yards off a rest). As a matter of interest, the night before a hunt I realized that I was out of my hunting load. My practice load drove this bullet at a chronographed velocity of 1200 fps (23.0 grs of H110). I used the practice load on a large whitetail, as luck would have it. The deer was facing me at a paced 75 yards. The bullet struck head on just under the spine and exited the far end. The deer hit the deck instantly. So much for needed nuclear powered loads for deer...
2. The LBT 240 gr. WFN (cannot be beat for reasonable range "smack" (smack is a ballistic technical term (LOL):
3. The Lee .430-310-FN that Frank Siefer and I designed for very large game in conjunction with Lee Precision. It later was put in the regular line-up and a
similar bullet for .45 caliber was added. This is a good heavy bullet design that shoots with GREAT accuracy in a variety of handguns:
Here's a link to the catalog page as I don't have a picture of a bullet I have cast in this style:
http://leeprecision.com/mold-dc-c-430-310-rf.html
I have come to really enjoy using the LBT WFN in both the .44 Special and .44 magnum. I have several revolvers in each caliber. However, in all candor, I must admit that all of my deer were taken with the #503 (250 gr. Keith) as that was before I got the WFN. Either will shoot through a large whitetail end for end at 100 yards when properly loaded.
Both the Mihec mould for the #503 Keith and the LBT can be ordered to your specs regarding diameter of finished bullet.
Dale53