Old Shotgun Question

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I've noticed that many older shotguns are full-choked, and have 28" or longer barrels. Any idea why ? not something that is common with current brands.
 
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When talking about cartridge shotguns. the longer length is to obtain more shot speed from the complete burning of Black Powder. The tight choke is for game at longer distance, like deer or waterfowl.

With the advent of smokeless powder higher velocities are obtainable with shorter barrels.

The folded crimp shot shell did away with the card over the shot, which causes patterns to open more quickly. The plastic shotcup in a modern wad causes the pattern to act one choke size tighter. This is the main reason older twin barrels shotguns are Modified and Full choked and post 1965 shotguns are Improved Cylinder and Modified.

Actually barrel length is at various lengths for the purpose of weight and/or handling characteristics. Upland game guns are 26" and Sporting Clays and waterfowl guns are often 30 & 32 inches.

Pump and semi-auto shotgun often have shorter barrel for weight and overall length considerations.

IN ALL THINGS FIREARMS; THE EXCEPTIONS ARE ALMOST AS COMMON AS THE NORMAL.

Ivan
 
There used to be more waterfowl hunters taking shots at longer distances.
Advantage full choke & longer barrel.

Now there are more upland bird hunters(pheasant, quail and such)
wider shot pattern with modified or improved cylinder and closer shots
so shorter barrel equals quicker & easier to get on target..
 
There used to be more waterfowl hunters taking shots at longer distances.
Advantage full choke & longer barrel.

Now there are more upland bird hunters(pheasant, quail and such)
wider shot pattern with modified or improved cylinder and closer shots
so shorter barrel equals quicker & easier to get on target..
I would hazard a guess that many shotguns purchased today are for home defense.
 
I would hazard a guess that many shotguns purchased today are for home defense.



This begs the question, what choke for home defense, with #1 buck?
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Back in the 60's when I started hunting...........
Most shotguns had the option of a full and modified barrel in the box.

A full choke would work for every thing, you just needed to let the quail get out a ways before pulling the trigger with the lead pellet loads.

There was also a "Poly-Choke" back in those days that went from Cylinder to full with a twist of the units body.

Some did not buy a full choke, if they did a lot of upland and rabbit hunting at 40 yards or less.
However my father like to hunt ducks and geese, so a full choke was in order.

We had Browning A-5"s as our top shot gun but did also have SxS 20 Ga. for the smaller game.
 
Very true, I was just looking at the hunting end of it..
A shotgun specific for home defense would be cylinder bore,
no choke restriction.

That would most likely be true with any of the Buck sized lead or large steel in BB or larger. Larger shot has tighter patterns from any size choke than smaller sized shot. But in modern construction of homes and apartments, Buckshot penetrates almost the same as similar rifle projectiles. No. 4 Buck is 24 caliber and size T steel shot is around 26 caliber, These two have been known to defeat ballistic vests in certain circumstances. So the use of smaller "bird" shot (sizes 4, 5, & 6) is often recommended for more urban settings and using a modified choke produces controllable patterns (as civilians we are responsible for ever single pellet of shot we fire!)

So for hunting, pest control, and self defense in apartments Modified is most likely the best universal choice, with Improved Cylinder a close second place.

Many modern shotguns have screw in choke tubes, even in short barrels. This makes fixed choke barrels obsolete, to some small degree. However my older fixed choke Sporting Clays guns, continue to give very satisfactory results! And my 50 and 90 year old hunting shotguns are still some of the best you could buy for hunting, (not collecting!)

Many Police departments have gone to 9mm carbines or AR-15 type rifles because of the liability of loose patterning shotguns and their stray pellets.

Ivan
 
I have a 1956 Stevens SXS 20g. Would it have a Improved and Modified do you think?

Today I was practicing for a "Vintage" shoot at our club this Sunday. I shot a 20 gauge 1930's Stevens that was choked Full and Extra Full in 30" barrels. With the use of some special spreading shells as well a regular shells. I also shot a 1954 Sauer 25 1/2" 20 gauge that was choked Modified and Full. I decided to use the longer tighter choked gun for ease of swing and the extra weight. If I had your IC/Mod choked gun in 26 or 28 inches, I would tickled pink! and 30" would be a dream come true! I prefer IC/Mod for Sporting Clays, where many like Skeet/IC or IC/IC. In my 30" O/U's, I use IC/Mod in my 410 and 28 gauge Sporting guns so much I have never chanced the chokes since I bought them in 2005 (even for skeet shooting). In 20 gauge 0/U's I use IC/Mod in warm weather and Mod/Mod in cold.

Ivan
 
Don't look now,,but the high dollar and the high demand in the SxS market right now is for anything (other than 12ga) with bbl lengths 30 inches and more. Preferably MORE,
16 and 20ga SxS's with 32 and even 34" bbls are all the rage. Even 28ga guns with the same..

No it's doesn't make any ballistic sense,,these people are all shooting smokeless powder cartridge guns. In the past few years, those darling 26" 20's and 16 SxS's have become observers to the race to find and buy guns w/ 32" bbl's. "Handle like a Dream" they say.
The next thing I expect to hear is that they "Shoot Harder",,

Wing shooting is generally easier with a longer bbl than short stubby one, lead, follow through and all that. I can remember being told by my father and uncles about long bbls 'shooting harder', a 12ga was the only ga that you can kill anything with and a Full choke was your only option. I used to argue with them, that's what a young person does don't they?
I guess they'd be proud of me today knowing most all my shotguns are pre WW2, 12ga, & full choke and I use them as they are. No spreader loads, ect. Skeet w/a Full,,SC w/Full. Why not,,

Fads and fashion come and go. But the change over from BP ammo to smokeless probably had the most to do with the change in shotgun form. At that, it's taken a long time
 
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Not True!

Very true, I was just looking at the hunting end of it..
A shotgun specific for home defense would be cylinder bore,
no choke restriction.

You would think, but not right. For home defense, no matter the barrel length, the choke should be as tight as possible to achieve the smallest pattern possible. For two reasons; the energy of pellet is dissipated quickly. The more pellets hitting in a small area the more apt the bad guy will be stopped. And two, with a very small pellet spread a well trained user of a shotgun can take a 'head shot' in a hostage situation. Say the bad guy has taken a member of the family hostage and is hiding behind. Given the slightest view of the bad guy's head a well trained and accomplished shotgunner could put say one half of the pellet pattern on that exposed area if the spread at that distance is well known. None of the above would be possible with an open choke shotgun barrel and the resulting very large pattern.

The wide spread shotgun pattern only had one use; that was to intimidate a crowd of bad guys. That was a popular tactic in the Old West that was overly popularized by the movie industry.

I was a home defense shotgun instructor. Volquartsen Company got their start building the best tight choked shotgun barrel obtainable back before the changeable shotgun choke systems were common. .......
 
No, Again Not True

That would most likely be true with any of the Buck sized lead or large steel in BB or larger. Larger shot has tighter patterns from any size choke than smaller sized shot. But in modern construction of homes and apartments, Buckshot penetrates almost the same as similar rifle projectiles. No. 4 Buck is 24 caliber and size T steel shot is around 26 caliber, These two have been known to defeat ballistic vests in certain circumstances. So the use of smaller "bird" shot (sizes 4, 5, & 6) is often recommended for more urban settings and using a modified choke produces controllable patterns (as civilians we are responsible for ever single pellet of shot we fire!)

So for hunting, pest control, and self defense in apartments Modified is most likely the best universal choice, with Improved Cylinder a close second place.

Many modern shotguns have screw in choke tubes, even in short barrels. This makes fixed choke barrels obsolete, to some small degree. However my older fixed choke Sporting Clays guns, continue to give very satisfactory results! And my 50 and 90 year old hunting shotguns are still some of the best you could buy for hunting, (not collecting!)

Many Police departments have gone to 9mm carbines or AR-15 type rifles because of the liability of loose patterning shotguns and their stray pellets.

Ivan

I would really like to see a verified citation of even one instance of any type of shotgun pellet having been known to penetrate any rated vest. I was attending SD Shotgun Instructor courses when the steel and bismuth shot was becoming available. I watched field tests of large steel shot thru tight choked barrels on available vests of mostly Second Chance manufacture. None ever penetrated even at point blank ranges. Before frangible rifle bullets were available all centerfire rifles had a major over penetration problem in common house building construction. Shotguns using lead pellets in 00 Buck and 0 Buck had more penetration ability than desired against common sheetrock construction. The "T" sized steel shot had far less penetration than lead shot because of the lesser density per shot pellet. In one class conducted by Clint Smith in Texas that I attended, it was determined at that time the optimum house shotgun self defense load was probably the heavy hunting load of mixed large and medium sized bismuth shot. That load would do the job on a bad guy and would lose its energy fast enough to not penetrate very much sheetrock construction.

The issue of using small pellet size in a HD shotgun has been beat to a frazzle by everyone. Again small shot looses its energy very quickly. Yes, it will do a good job at very close up tight and personal ranges, but will not do nearly as good of job at say across a large room distance as will the two heaviest lead shot loads will. I would not recommend the use of bird shot for HD shotguns except if one lives in a cheaply built multi-unit apartment house.

I still have a HD Shotgun with a 18.5" barrel equipped with a very tight multi-choke. It is loaded with that very heavy high base goose hunting load of bismuth shot. I am confidant that if forced to use it, an errant shot is not going to penetrate multiple walls and endanger people inside or outside my house.

Given the development of frangible rifle bullets, I am very much leaning toward putting up the HD shotgun and going with a very compact AR-15 in 7.62x39 loaded with 180 grain frangible bullets and equipped with an ACOG sight. I suspect that the use of shotguns for home defense is an era that is coming to an end, the shotgun capability and versatility being surpassed by advancing technology. ..............
 
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Today I was practicing for a "Vintage" shoot at our club this Sunday. I shot a 20 gauge 1930's Stevens that was choked Full and Extra Full in 30" barrels. With the use of some special spreading shells as well a regular shells. I also shot a 1954 Sauer 25 1/2" 20 gauge that was choked Modified and Full. I decided to use the longer tighter choked gun for ease of swing and the extra weight. If I had your IC/Mod choked gun in 26 or 28 inches, I would tickled pink! and 30" would be a dream come true! I prefer IC/Mod for Sporting Clays, where many like Skeet/IC or IC/IC. In my 30" O/U's, I use IC/Mod in my 410 and 28 gauge Sporting guns so much I have never chanced the chokes since I bought them in 2005 (even for skeet shooting). In 20 gauge 0/U's I use IC/Mod in warm weather and Mod/Mod in cold.

Ivan


Well I had to get the old Stevens out and measure the barrel; 28 inches. So what I'm hearing is "Don't cut the barrel down for home defense."
 
By all means, cut that barrel off at 18.5". Just have a multi-choke system installed and then screw in the tightest choke you can find. If you don't want that expense, stay with the original barrel length and whatever choke it has. But, as stated before; work with the tightest pattern of shot downrange possible. .....
 
OK, you guys talking all the changeable chokes, tight patterns for home defense shotguns, show me one that average Joe can buy off the shelf for
under $300.

I'm not referring to what an accomplished hunter or shooter would buy and use. Average Joe doesn't know what choke does what, doesn't understand velocity, penatration and all that technical stuff.

The Mossberg 500/Maverick 88 is cylinder bore
The Remington 870 is cylinder bore.
Those 2 are in that price range.

Those 2 I would think are the biggest sellers in the home defense market. Reasonable price & dependable
 
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Words of Wisdom

Ah... finally a chance to slip this in:
"FBI tabulations suggest that the normal number of rounds fired out of a police shotgun in a fight is one."
-- Jeff Cooper, G&A 9/87, p. 67

I ran across that while rummaging through old magazines in the basement.
 
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Well I had to get the old Stevens out and measure the barrel; 28 inches. So what I'm hearing is "Don't cut the barrel down for home defense."

A nice '30's vintage Stevens w/ original bbls,,I'd leave it right like it is. They are fine shotguns and you see plenty of them on the Vintage shotgun courses now. They are again being appreciated. Once they or any of them are cut,,that's it for their originality.
A gentleman recently brought out his Dad's Stevens Mod 235 SxS to shoot skeet with us. It looked like it had never been used at all. A beautiful shotgun. I'd have really been disappointed had it been sawed to stagecoach length.



A short bbld pump can be had straight from the mfgs these days or with a bit of browsing of the shops, shows and net. Plenty of older mfg ones around or converted field guns.

As far as the choke, many of the newest ones have choke tubes so you can decide for yourself what choke you 'need' inside the abode to protect it.

I personally have never seen much of a difference between a full choke pattern and that of a cylinder choke pattern shot at coffee table distance.
Try it on a couple pie plates and see for yourself,,ten ft or so.
Remember your shotgun muzzle is about 3' closer to the intruder than you are when it goes bang,

The short bbl makes for the ease of handling.
An ounce+ (about 500grains) of lead shot at 1200+fps at that distance wether 7.5's or 2's isn't going to show a difference.

JMHO
 
When talking about cartridge shotguns. the longer length is to obtain more shot speed from the complete burning of Black Powder. The tight choke is for game at longer distance, like deer or waterfowl.

With the advent of smokeless powder higher velocities are obtainable with shorter barrels.

The folded crimp shot shell did away with the card over the shot, which causes patterns to open more quickly. The plastic shotcup in a modern wad causes the pattern to act one choke size tighter. This is the main reason older twin barrels shotguns are Modified and Full choked and post 1965 shotguns are Improved Cylinder and Modified.

Actually barrel length is at various lengths for the purpose of weight and/or handling characteristics. Upland game guns are 26" and Sporting Clays and waterfowl guns are often 30 & 32 inches.

Pump and semi-auto shotgun often have shorter barrel for weight and overall length considerations.

IN ALL THINGS FIREARMS; THE EXCEPTIONS ARE ALMOST AS COMMON AS THE NORMAL.

Ivan

^^^^This^^^^

And "old shotguns" were manufactured in a time when the average owner was a sportsman, and bought accordingly.

Most shotgun threads I see now, especially on other forums, are completely focused on fighting off the ubiquitous boogeyman who lurks just outside the front door and are stacked with shorter barred, shot shell saddled, collapsible stocked, all black shotguns. If I was in the market for one of those I could go on the local gun board and buy one today. If I want a classic hunting shotgun, well I will have to wait a while for that. As always, YMMV.
 
For home defense use, typical engagement ranges will be within 30 feet. At that distance, the choke is irrelevant. Just to limit penetration through walls, smaller shot sizes, say #4 (not #4 Buck), will perform just fine against any BGs.
 
Yes!

OK, you guys talking all the changeable chokes, tight patterns for home defense shotguns, show me one that average Joe can buy off the shelf for
under $300.

I'm not referring to what an accomplished hunter or shooter would buy and use. Average Joe doesn't know what choke does what, doesn't understand velocity, penatration and all that technical stuff.

The Mossberg 500/Maverick 88 is cylinder bore
The Remington 870 is cylinder bore.
Those 2 are in that price range.

Those 2 I would think are the biggest sellers in the home defense market. Reasonable price & dependable

Pawn Girl; I like you! You are sharp and cut right to the heart of any question. There is are a couple of solutions; Rem and Moss are both producing short shotgun after market barrels right around 20" that come with the interchangeable chokes and mounted rifle sights. Haunt ebay until you find one at a reasonable cost. AND, there is a firm in Turkey that makes replacement barrels for both Rem and Moss that comes with fixed choke (Full) or with interchangeable choke tubes. It is a little more expensive than the fixed version, but is still reasonable. I was a little suspect about them until working with both versions of the Turkey product. I have one on one of my Rem 870s right now. I am favorably impressed by the Turkey shotgun barrel. Unless you can luck into a shotgun action and stock for $150 or under, your total cost will be a little more than your top figure of $300, but not by much. Just lay off those $5.00 a cup Lattes for 10 days and you will be good to go.... :-)
 
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Well I had to get the old Stevens out and measure the barrel; 28 inches. So what I'm hearing is "Don't cut the barrel down for home defense."

Correct!!!! The most you can legally cut off the barrels is 10 in. and I don't know where you live but doubt that you live in a room so small that 10 more in. of barrel length will prevent you from using the gun. Larry
 
Try Something

For home defense use, typical engagement ranges will be within 30 feet. At that distance, the choke is irrelevant. Just to limit penetration through walls, smaller shot sizes, say #4 (not #4 Buck), will perform just fine against any BGs.

DWalt: IMHO, you couldn't be more wrong about not needing a tight pattern in a HD shotgun. Clint Smith often teaches at the original Thunder Ranch in Texas during the winter when he is frozen out of his place near Lakeview, OR. I suggest you take a self defense shotgun course there and see if you don't change your mind a little bit.

And, what I would like you to try is to get a couple of cheap sawhorses, 6 ea. 32 oz. plastic juice jugs filled with water and find a place to shoot. Get someone with a tight choked 12 ga. loaded with 00 or 0 Buck, your shotgun loaded with light pellets of your choice and each of you shoot 3 of those jugs at 10 yards. The size of that jug is just about the size of the center of mass of a human. When you are looking at the huge difference in damage to the jugs imagine that jug represents a 200 to 250 lb. man that is high on both meth and pot and is rampaging thru your house and has a weapon of some sort himself. NOW decide which shotgun and which loads you would prefer to have at that time.

And, the use of smaller pellets just doesn't hold up to reviews of actual cases of use. I will cite one example; a man here in Las Vegas came home to find his home being burgled by a fairly large well muscled man. The good guy had his HD shotgun with him in his vehicle. He entered his home by the garage personnel door to be immediately confronted by the burglar with a knife or a hatchet. I forget which. The good guy shot the bad guy from a distance of about 15 to 16 ft. with one shot of 12 ga. 00 Buck. The bad guy had turned sideways and took the shot across the left arm and partially into the chest. The bad guy ran out of the garage and ran over two blocks before giving up. The bad guy took most of the pellets, was not wearing a coat or heavy clothes, AND survived with just a short amount of time in the hospital. IF he had been armed with a handgun in the other hand he could have inflicted a lot of return damage. Given any amount of distance involved a load of shotgun pellets looses a lot of energy fast. Humans are a lot tougher than ducks or geese. AND, most of us upland game bird hunters have been hit by light pellets from other hunters. By and large all one has to do is wear safety glasses and those light pellets are no never mind.

BTW: We LEO's talked about this 12 ga. 00 buck failure to stop case for quite a while and thought about it every time we loaded our 12 ga. short barreled shotguns into our patrol cars.
 
Pawn Girl; I like you! You are sharp and cut right to the heart of any question. There is are a couple of solutions; Rem and Moss are both producing short shotgun after market barrels right around 20" that come with the interchangeable chokes and mounted rifle sights. Haunt ebay until you find one at a reasonable cost. AND, there is a firm in Turkey that makes replacement barrels for both Rem and Moss that comes with fixed choke (Full) or with interchangeable choke tubes. It is a little more expensive than the fixed version, but is still reasonable. I was a little suspect about them until working with both versions of the Turkey product. I have one on one of my Rem 870s right now. I am favorably impressed by the Turkey shotgun barrel. Unless you can luck into a shotgun action and stock for $150 or under, your total cost will be a little more than your top figure of $300, but not by much. Just lay off those $5.00 a cup Lattes for 10 days and you will be good to go.... :-)

No $5 Lattes, I make my own at home! Totally operating on adrenaline right now, I'm chairperson for a Ducks Unlimited banquet tonight. Otherwise, thanks for the compliment.

Speaking of Turkey, I have heard good stuff about the Escort line, to the effect that they are an 870 clone for about $100 less, and yes, their home defense model is cylinder bore choke.
I'm not saying what is better or best in HD situation, just what is out there in the marketplace. Should the manufacturers be selling HD guns with full choke? Not my call.
 
Maybe

I have a 1956 Stevens SXS 20g. Would it have a Improved and Modified do you think?

The choke of each barrel will be stamped sometimes in code and sometimes with an abbreviated word. Those stampings will be on the under side of the barrel hidden by the forearm. Sometimes they are stamped at the rear of the barrel locking block on each side. Do a Google search and someone will have posted the Stevens/Savage choke identification system. ...

BTW: you didn't state the barrel length. Shorter barreled shotgun are usually choked with the more open chokes, while the longer 28" and up are usually modified choke for the first barrel to fire and full choke for the second barrel.
 
Stevens didn't stamp choke markings on their SxS shotguns. A 1956 mfg would have been made when under the Savage umbrella of Savage /Stevens/Fox.

The general catalog offerings in 20ga was 28" and 26" bbls.
The 28" bbl (20ga) guns were Mod & Full,,the 26" were ImpCyl and Mod.
20ga guns generally follow these rules, but I've seen a few differ to more open chokes Wether more open chokes than listed are from aftermarket alterations or factory I don't know. There are no records available for these.

A 1956 Stevens (Savage mfg) should have an 'H' date code on the frame if I counted on my fingers right. The code usually stamped in a small circle or oval on the bottom of the frame right by the forend iron. Might include a number also. What the number means is up for speculation.
 
Shotguns that were bought in hill country were normally Full choke, they were more versatile. It was unusual to find anything
but a FC, even single barrels. You would see a few with Polys or
Cutts, but they weren't popular. When the interchangeable barrel
came out, then guys bought barrels to fit the game. The Federal
regulation on shotguns: 18" barrel & 26" over all length of the
gun. Rifle 16" & 26" over all length. I have cut dozens of shotgun
always cut to 18 1/4", just to be safe. I have "saved" a few that
had bulges that required the barrel less than 18". To save you
can put a non removable choke on, that will count as barrel. The
last few years for rabbits and grouse I have been using a 1100Lt
with a 21" FC , Special Field barrel, 20g. If you get a good gun
with damaged barrel, you can save it buy having it threaded for
internal chokes. I have a 23" barrel 1897 Win, that I had threaded, with Turkey chokes it will surprise you, on how tight it
shoots.
 
Remington cut a shotgun bbls down a few inches or an inch at a time, Velocity did not diminish until after 21" I believe they offered some but they did not sell. Marketing ploy? They would get a free bbl every 3rd gun and this would lower their costs.

A Shotgun writer I used to read and converse with once wrote in an article it is just old school, folks still believe a longer bbl hits harder. Perhaps with black powder but not today.

I do agree a longer bbl swings better but after I quit competitive sporting clays, skeet and skeet I went to one gun for clays and hunting. It is a Benelli SBE in waterfowl camo with a 26" bbl. Just keep the bbl moving and the end result will be as good.

In the 70's I traded into a M-12 Winchester folks then did not want, a US marked riot gun. It was a quail and rabbit taking machine. My old county Sheriff also had one, his was blue, it rode in the trunk of his cruiser and was his quail gun.

I believe they were 18" or 18.5"s long.

I had an Elhew pointer, she was a great dog, there was quail, I bought a new Browning grade 5 M-12 in 28 guage. It had a fixed full choke. The 1st covey that came up gave me a straight going away shot, at 5 yards only the wings floated down. All in the middle was gone. After that I let them fly for a while then shot. I thought about having screw in chokes added but the gun was pretty heavy, a 20 would have been better, the bbl looked as thick as a water pipe.

My old Win Model 12's in 20 were light and like a fool I sold them.

A friend had an engraved Italian Cesar Guerini in 28 gauge. He could not hit anything, imp and mod choke tubes. We went pheasant hunting, part way thru the day I gave him my SBE and ammo, he started killing birds. I did not miss nor let one get away with the 28.

We did an afternoon of sporting clays, he hit so few we did not ask his score. He was embarrassed. I handed him my SBE and ammo, he started breaking birds. I went about 12-15 straight with his Cesar. I told him we should just trade guns, even. He would not go for it. The guys told him he needs to trade, if it comes down to hunting or starving he's gonna get real hungry. I truly liked that Cesar 28, it was light and fit me well but too fancy for my M-12 or camo SBE tastes. Can you imagine taking that engraved Cesar O/U to a redneck rabbit hunt? Can you imagine the flack folks like my Bro and uncles would have piled on me?
 
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