As some may have noticed, I'm a heavy bullet fan. I tend to shoot 325 gr .44's, 380 gr .375's and 240 gr .308's.
If you are concerned about the rate of twist that means you are considering a new barrel, so I'll tell you what I did with my .308. When I had it chambered I made up a dummy round with a 200 gr MK so that the bullet was seated so only the boat-tail was below the neck. This was sent to my gun smith who cut the chamber so the lead would allow for this long OAL. This additional powder capacity allows me to come within a hair of 2700 fps with that bullet from a 1:8 28" barrel. That's a far cry from the 2400 fps maximum listed in the loading manuals. Now, you might not get that velocity from a short barrel hunting rifle, but it will behave more like a .30/06 if you want to shoot heavy bullets. Before taking that step though, you want to make sure that your magazine will accept that long a cartridge.
If 220's are as heavy as you will load, then a 1:10 is probably the correct choice, in fact a 240 gr Woodleigh will also stabilize in a 1:10 barrel. For the naysayers who claim that a fast twist destroys light bullet accuracy, I was out a few weeks ago with my .308, and was hitting clay birds at 825 yards with 168 gr Nosler J-4's, but I haven't tried any long range shooting with lighter bullets from that barrel to say that accuracy would hold up with 155's. Based on my experience with fast twist barrels I think it will, but I haven't done it.
The bottom line is, I have discovered that I am limited by too slow a twist far more often than I am too fast a twist. My wife's .30/06 Husky has a 1:12 barrel, and that barrel will not stabilize 240 gr Woodleighs, but my 1:10 .30/06 Brno does. My Lilja 1:10 .243 will not stabilize the long 107 gr MK's, but a 1:7 would. My old 1:7 .222 shot every .224 bullet I loaded for it beyond what might be reasonably expected, while the factory 1:14 barrel would only shoot 52 gr match bullets to my satisfaction.