

Actually, the Partition is just as good a design today as when it was first introduced, and will be as good 100 years from now... the game has not changed, deer hide is no thicker, moose scapulas have not gone titanium. The whole point of the bullet was to split the difference between a soft and a solid... the front opens quick the back continues forward... I have seen it do that hundreds of times with boring regularity... it will probably keep doing that.As effective as the NP is, it's basically a poor bullet design in 2026.
It would definitely be my go to, in many situations at a certain range of power level, on most NA game, across a broad range of distances. IMO, it is the absolutely perfect bullet in bears out to a couple hundred yards. It is perfect on moose to the same distance, and somewhat more from typical 7mm 160 grain, .30 cal 180 grain, .338 200 grain etc... it would not be my choice at either ultra high speed or low speed or long distance. One thing it doesn't get enough credit for is straddling the fence well at 20 yards AND 200 - 300 yards from medium speed cartridges, like the most common standards, .270, .280, .308, .30-06 etc... where some of these "splash" at close range with light C&C bullets and "pencil" at longer range with stout Bonded or mono bullets... the Partition performs pretty well in both scenarios... so I always say if both scenarios are on the table, then the Partition is a solid choice... rather than optimizing for one end of the spectrum or the other. YMMV.Yeah but how many options do we have now compared to 70+ years ago
The Partition works, no doubt - but it's not a go-to hunting bullet for most hunters anymore for many reasons




























