Having hunted half of my life with buckshot...you'd be surprised to learn how close the gun has to be for the wad to penetrate. About six inches to muzzle contact distance. Beyond that it tends to just hang in the entrance wound.
It's a hallway gun. #8 will do the job. Everything else is just bar talk . . .
A wad make holes in plywood? From 10 yards? Then why are we loading shot or slugs in our guns at all? I've seen a lot of shotguns patterned on paper and cardboard. I've seen the wad make holes in both of those at 13 yards. I've seen plenty of shotgun shots at plywood, but I've never seen a wad put a hole in plywood by itself.I've seen wads make holes in plywood numerous times from 10 yards/360".
Exactly right. And this is why trusting your life to bird shot is...well...not advised. Use the largest, most destructive load you can effectively place on target. Could #8 stop someone? Well, I guess, but I'm sticking with a real load for self-defense.There's no such thing as a GUARENTEED one shot stop. Perps take multiple hits all the time from much bigger/faster projectiles than birdshot.
Capstick is notorious for being a hero of his own stories. Remember the time he went to followup on a leopard and had an unloaded shotgun?Capstick related how he killed an African lion with a low-base load of #8 at close range.
Yes I tried some of the buckshot yesterday with the clip, see my post above. It is the first pattern. I'm not certain if they are really worth the extra effort to procure. You can get the reduced recoil buckshot loads and be money ahead I think. If and when they become readily available I may look at getting some more of the buckshot. The 7½'s are a waste as you can buy Winchester Low Recoil Low Noise and even at $10 a box you get more shells, more shot and less recoil. I found this to be oddly true.Has anyone tried Aguila Minishells 1 3/4". You can get Slugs, Buckshot( 7 #4 buck 4#1buck 5/8oz @1200fps), 7.5 birdshot. You can get 8 rounds in the Shockwave. About 50% less recoil, pure fun! The problem is finding them and the high price. With s/h i paid over a $1. a round. Neat idea for close in work. You need a Mini-clip to made them work in a Shockwave. The rubber clip is made in Texas (www.OPSolmini-clip.co
SGA Ammo is where I got mine. They are all sold out. Shocking as they had a bunch in stock when I bought it. To the tune of 8 cases of 250 and a couple of 50's and some loose boxes. Somebody somewhere equipped for #1 Buck is all I can think.Where did you get it?
Anyone here do business with these people? $78/100 delivered. Find it cheaper?
Federal 12 Gauge Tactical LE1321B 2-3/4" Reduced Recoil 1 Buckshot 15 Pellets 50 rounds
I was referring to penetration on deer. Most of the times I had was penetration it was on finishing shots on deer with a shotgun. One season I failed to ensure my gun had a full choke installed for deer season and instead hunted all season with improved cylinder. I learned a lot about moving and shooting and also about reloading in a hurry. Wads were bouncing off at five yards and often times as you got closer you would have hang up on the front side, but you needed to be very close. The only time it fully penetrated was when the gun was nearly muzzle contact distance for a finishing shot and the wad was protruding out the far side of the head slightly. Some of the high velocity Flitecontrol offerings may have the speed to achieve penetration, but I don't believe a conventional petal shot cup does.R-U shooting blanks?I've seen wads make holes in plywood numerous times from 10 yards/360". Stuff happens so I don't doubt you have experienced that.
Ballistic personal defense weapons work by penetration, hence you can't have "too much" penetration.
Ipso facto, save the birdshot for birds, #1 buck for coyotes. Double-ought buck all the time.
That load will open up and to a beautiful pattern beyond ten and remain full, but spready out to thirty yards.
"Number 1 buck is the smallest diameter shot that reliably and consistently penetrates more than 12 inches of standard ordnance gelatin when fired at typical shotgun engagement distances."
First, hits on target are everything. Tell me more about the heavy penetrating fliers in your pattern and all the help they are. Secondly, I don't base my choices off ballistic gelatin. I know for a fact that 00 Buck fired at 1100 fps in a 3½" shell will penetrate a deer through both ribs at 70 yards. I know at 90-100 yds #4 Buck will not penetrate beyond hide nearside. I have seen #1 Buck penetrate beyond fifty yards for killing effect. No it's not glorious 00, but it does pattern well and make hits that count. 1500 fps of spread out energy. Some of those loads you don't have to aim at all by 20 yards.But it still won't penetrate adequately. Pattern gets you nothing.
If you are being accosted by a naked perp, slap yourself at least once to make sure you're not having a nightmare.I prefer some margin, in case the perp is wearing clothes.
I've done lotsa reading about this - including this great thread - I've ordered some rubber pellet (Fiocchi LE) from Midway for my Shockwave for in-house use. I'm sure there are lots of arguments both ways - but I'll take my chances with the first round being non-lethal. I think it provides a better legal standing (I'm pure outhouse lawyer!) and I'm sure at across-the-room range that it'll put a hurt on anyone crashing into our place ...
Naked perps respond best to 000 anyway.
I'm sure that Fiocchi makes quality ammo, but just for info., my buddy bought some less than lethal shotgun shells at a gun show. They were "loaded" with 1 rubber ball. We decided to try them out the same day that I was showing off my Remington 870 Gatekeeper II. He shot them out of his short barreled copy of the Winchester 1887 lever action 12 ga. (I believe his is Norinco). I wasn't favorably impressed with the quality of the gun, but I digress. None of the rubber balls shot ever made it out of the barrel. My point is beware of the "specialty" shotgun shells and if you shoot them, check the barrel for clear after each shot.I've done lotsa reading about this - including this great thread - I've ordered some rubber pellet (Fiocchi LE) from Midway for my Shockwave for in-house use. I'm sure there are lots of arguments both ways - but I'll take my chances with the first round being non-lethal. I think it provides a better legal standing (I'm pure outhouse lawyer!) and I'm sure at across-the-room range that it'll put a hurt on anyone crashing into our place ...