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You and the 12-yard bird. Part II
Taking pointed birds at 12 to 20 yards.
By Bill Hanus
www.billhanusbirdguns.com
Help! Help! . . . you’re choking me! The fact is
that we’re shooting guns that are too tightly choked. In
the pre-choke tube years – say fifty years ago -- the problem
could be dealt with simply by taking your trusty hack saw in hand
and removing two or three inches off the muzzle of the offending,
too-tightly choked shotgun. Viola! . . . you and your cylinder-bored
shotgun are ready to take on the world. But times change.
Today, not only do the bulk of the shotguns sold have screw-in
choke tubes (commonly IC-M-F) – but ammunition makers are
creating shotgun shells that are technologically light years ahead
of the paper-wadded shells of yesteryear. This greater efficiency
can be the ruin of your 12-yard game.
If you are shooting pointed birds in heavy cover, you’re
going to see a lot of 12-yard birds – and maybe that’s
all you see. Lotsa’ flushes but not lotsa’ shots.
Here’s why – we took BSA’s
(there’s an excellent article by Ted Hatfield on the background
of Birmingham Small Arms in the February, 2005 issue of The American
Rifleman) new Royal model 20 gauge side-by-side out for a spin
and shot some patterns with the factory-supplied Improved Cylinder
and Modified choke tubes. It doesn’t take a lot of cardboard
to shoot 12-yard patterns with IC and M choke tubes in the gun.
At 12 yards the Improved Cylinder choke tube had a 14” pattern
and the Modified choke tube had a 13” pattern. So into a
circle the size of a medium pizza , we put a couple hundred pellets
(would you believe 359 No. 8’s in a 7/8 oz. 20 gauge load?).
The small pattern makes it easy to miss – but then connecting
with this pattern ain’t all it’s cracked up to be
either.
In theory, an Improved Modified choke in a 20 gauge barrel is
defined as having a maximum of .007” constriction more than
the bore diameter. That’s the theory, but you have to understand
that on production guns, you almost always end up with more constriction
than advertised.
This error is compounded by advances in the development of shotshell
ammunition.
Baschieri & Pellagri, who is probably best
known to bird shooters for their 16 and 28 loads, markets a 12
and 20 gauge shotshell ammunition line which features the Gordon
System of ignition, that has helped B&P win gold medals in
competitive shooting. This probably requires a word of an explanation
because it epitomizes the kind of creative thinking that contributes
to the efficiency of shotshell design and usage today. You can
learn more at: www.bandpusa.com.
The Gordon System is a different way to make shotshells. The inner
base of the hull is a progressive dampening spring that operates
when the shell is fired. This has an immediate benefit: it works
along with a collapsing base wad to absorb recoil by reducing
operating pressures. It’s like having a shock absorber in
front and a recoil spring in the rear. The key benefit here is
that you can operate at lower pressures -- which translates into
less shot deformation -- which means better patterns and less
recoil -- hence less muzzle jump, so you don’t have to look
all over the sky to take a pair. It means you can ratchet up the
shot speeds to buy an extra five or ten yards of range –
say out to 30 or 35 yards when you have open chokes in the gun
– without boosting operating pressures or felt recoil.
What we have here is a situation where we’re pushing modern
shotshell miracles – from B&P, Federal , Fiocchi, Remington
and Winchester --through an arbitrary choke choice that was designed
for shotguns with half-inch forcing cones, cardboard shells with
fiber wads and chilled shot in use a hundred years ago!
Briley to the rescue! While it was still on the
drawing board, BSA wisely decided to use the semi-standard Beretta
threading for their choke tubes – which meant that the BSA
Royal model test gun was able to benefit from Briley’s (800/331-5718)
research and the development of their Diffusion™ choke tube
(a skeet choke tube, cut with a one-turn-in-14” rifling).
The idea is that the rifling imparts a spin to the shot as it
goes through the tube en route to the bird. The following chart
shows how the Briley Skeet ($35) and Diffusion™ ($55) choke
tubes compare to the BSA factory Improved Cylinder chokes at 12-
and 20-yard distances:
| Pattern diameter (in inches)
at: |
| BSA-supplied |
| |
12 Yards |
20 Yards |
| Improved Cylinder choke |
14 |
22 |
| Briley Skeet choke |
16 |
25 |
| Briley Diffusion™ choke |
17.5 |
29 |
On 12-yard birds, Skeet choke
provides a 14% larger pattern; the Diffusion™ spreader tube,
a 25% larger pattern. At 20 yards, the larger pattern bonuses
remain pretty much the same – about a 14% larger pattern
with Skeet and a 31% larger pattern with the Diffusion™
spreader choke.
Write this down: you will take more birds with open
chokes!

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