I have. They work.
I prefer something heavier. I like the non-cannelure 60gr Hornady. Considerably better penetration combined with good expansion and better weight retention.
The biggest problem I've had with the Hornady's with cannelures, is inconsistent accuracy. Some lot #'s will shoot like the non-cannelure version, but more often the cannelure will significantly degrade accuracy. Poor accuracy affects good shot placement which is paramount shooting .22cf's. The last lot# I had shot 2" groups from my .22/250 that occasionally puts 5 Sierra's in one hole.
I bought a thousand Hornady 60 gr Blems that has the cannelure too far foward. They shoot decently, but no better than 7/8" at 100yds.
If I was going to buy more bullets to shoot deer with my .223 or .22/250's, I'd get more 63gr Sierra Semi-pointed. My 1/14" twist .22/250 shoots under 1" with them.
My go-to .22cf for plinking does is a Rem. M-7 in .223. It has a 1/12" twist bbl and shoots the Sierra 65gr GameKing as well as it shoots anything. (1.5" 5-shots@100yds).
If you have a1/9" twist, try the Berger 70gr VLD over 25.0gr RL15 @2.26"oal.
Also, a better choice is either the MidwayUSA "dogtown" or Midsouth " VarmintNightMare" 55gr SoftPoints. Better accuracy at similar pricepoint as the bulk Hornady's with the cannelure.
Remember, with the .22cf's on deer, It's "shot placement, shot placement, shot placement".
Just don't expect much from a TNT, blitz, SX, or plastic tip explosive expansion bullet.
No need for a uber expensive monolithic alloy bullet either. Your 55gr soft points will work it you can get them to shoot accurately.