Need some help and wanted some advice before I spent the money on a box that may not work as well. I will be shooting the IC .665 with a Browning Maxus 28 inch barrel, 3.5in shell. Which do you think would pattern better and is there maybe a better shell. Magblends seem to be a favorite. Also wanting to put some adjustable sights on the rib, any advice.
IMO you do not need 5's with HD shot better pellet count with 6's even better with EM-7's.If u dont want to spend the money on patterning to really see what the gun likes i would say XR 6's will be a safe bet and EM-7's even better.It all depends if u want to kill turkeys or win a still target event.Call indian creek they are very helpful.
I shoot win/er 3" #6 shot. Seen some people shoot 3 1/2 horrible patterns and switch to 3" and problem eradicated.That gobbler in my avatar was harvested with a choke I bought from Clark (allaboutshooting) actuallt its my third gobbler. The choke loves winnie 3" #6shot extented range shells. :you_rock:
Quote from: RutStrut on March 23, 2011, 09:24:51 AM
Need some help and wanted some advice before I spent the money on a box that may not work as well. I will be shooting the IC .665 with a Browning Maxus 28 inch barrel, 3.5in shell. Which do you think would pattern better and is there maybe a better shell. Magblends seem to be a favorite. Also wanting to put some adjustable sights on the rib, any advice.
First of all, congratulations on the Maxus. All of my readers shooting that gun are having great results with the Hevi-13 shells with either #6 or where allowed #7 shot shells. Most are shooting 3" shells rather than the 3.5" due to reduced recoil and for some, better patterns.
The Magnum Blend is also a great shell but does have more noticeable recoil than the standard Hevi-13 shells.
As far as adjustable sights, I prefer the Truglo "Pro Series" of fiber optic sights but the Williams are also good ones.
Lastly, I'd recommend that you "deep clean" that barrel. Browning makes some of the best production barrels I've seen but a good cleaning always helps.
Thanks,
Clark
Go with #6 for sure. The velocity and weight are sufficient to kill beyond 50 yards if your pattern holds up. Had to anchor a running bird last year. Broke his leg at 52 yards. So the weight of #5 is not needed and all you are doing is limiting the number of shot in the pattern.
Quote from: Skeeterbait on March 23, 2011, 10:13:30 AM
Go with #6 for sure. The velocity and weight are sufficient to kill beyond 50 yards if your pattern holds up. Had to anchor a running bird last year. Broke his leg at 52 yards. So the weight of #5 is not needed and all you are doing is limiting the number of shot in the pattern.
:agreed: :icon_thumright:
Thank you everyone for the opinions, it looks like I may start with the Win ER #6's. First I need to stop at BPS on Fri and pick up one of those Tru Glo Magnum Pro gobbler sights and try to find my POI. Can I use regular 3inch small game/birdshot loads for that?
Quote from: RutStrut on March 23, 2011, 01:14:08 PM
Thank you everyone for the opinions, it looks like I may start with the Win ER #6's. First I need to stop at BPS on Fri and pick up one of those Tru Glo Magnum Pro gobbler sights and try to find my POI. Can I use regular 3inch small game/birdshot loads for that?
I would do that by firing 3 consecutive shots at "big paper", at least 3 feet x 3 feet, at 20 yards. By shooting 3 shells, before changing the paper, you'll easily be able to see where the core of your pattern is. Then, you can make adjustments, shoot a turkey load at clean paper, then move out to 40 yards and you should be good to go.
Thanks,
Clark
Indian Creek recommended the #5 Win XR over the #6's with my setup. I cant figure out the logic, except that maybe more downrange penetration with the 5's. I would of thought the 6's would of been better, more pellets, better patterns, etc???
Over half of the people who call a choke company are still shooting lead and still have the mind set that #6 is squirrel shot and it takes #4 to kill a turkey. I would not tell customers to use #6 either if I knew that over half the people are going to hang up and think "they don't know what the're talking about".
shoot 6s unless you plan on shooting 120 yards
I Use lead #5's. Here in southern Oklahoma most days the wind is 20 mph or higher. #5's buck the wind a little better.
Quote from: Rob Robertson on March 23, 2011, 02:48:20 PM
I Use lead #5's. Here in southern Oklahoma most days the wind is 20 mph or higher. #5's buck the wind a little better.
#5's are my favorite also
Quote#5's are my favorite also
In Lead shells, absolutely.
Quote from: Gobble! on March 23, 2011, 02:30:50 PM
shoot 6s unless you plan on shooting 120 yards
:agreed:
Quote from: 3" 870 Shell Shucker on March 25, 2011, 08:38:16 AM
Quote#5's are my favorite also
In Lead shells, absolutely.
I use #5's quite a bit in HTL also
in htl both will kill with ease, 6's will usually pattern better, but 5's straight smoke birds
in lead i like 5's, for some reasons the 6's and 5's pattern exactly the same for me, so its an easy decision to go with 5's for extra knock down power
I would shoot Hevi-13 #7 over any 5's or 6's. You will put a lot more shot in the vitals and still shoot plum through the head and neck at 50yds on the majority of shot that hits these areas. It's a win-win situation.
3" #6 :z-winnersmiley:
My SBEII with a Final Strut .650 likes both XRHD 5s and 6s. I have some of both ready for this year.