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in 3 shots: the .575 averaged 326 pellets in 10" circle and 204 in the 20" circle. 530 total avg.in 4 shots: the .585 averaged 306 pellets in 10" circle and 226 in the 20" circle. 532 total avg.
With TSS, I learned early on that the outer 20 inch coverage is really more important than the inner ten. Any TSS load through a modern choke will put more than enough in the ten to kill a bird to reasonable ranges, but a lot of chokes with great ten coverage will be sparse in the outer twenty pellet count, and that is where you miss birds. To your reply, I totally agree and would take either of your setups to the woods, - and if I missed a bird, would know it was not the gun. I have a brand-new IC .570 just begging to get out of the box and screwed into something. I will try that first, and if that does not work, I will get a .585 Trulock Precision Hunter and possibly a .590 and let you know how they do. Please let us know if you try anything else and it shoots good for you in your gun. Thanks again.
agree with everything u typed... solid point on the 20 circle count... one thing gleaned in testing chokes: some chokes threw a tight 10 circle had a lot of fliers OUTSIDE the 20. know ur total pellet count in the SHELL is paramount. one reason is chose the 575/585 Trulocks is they distributed the majority of the 590 pellets of the #9 Apex TSS IN the 10 AND 20 circles.IC 570 had a nice pattern. the 10/20 circle were just "better" w/ the Trulocks.