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Started by King Cobra, April 02, 2024, 06:01:10 AM
Quote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 02:27:07 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 01:44:11 PMQuote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.They definitely wasn't to far. But I'm not doubting you at all on my part. That's what puzzled me. I'm not a betting man, if I were though I'd be the farm that those that ran off would have gotten anchored had it been lead. Even if it wasn't the bulk of the pattern. I know tss has got to be bad stuff because you see to many birds being killed. There is no denying it. All 8 had holes everywhere in their heads. I would love to gain confidence in it though because I would rather hunt with my 20ga than a 12.For starters....- Which load and gauge? (factory or handload)- Shot size?- Range?
Quote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 01:44:11 PMQuote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.They definitely wasn't to far. But I'm not doubting you at all on my part. That's what puzzled me. I'm not a betting man, if I were though I'd be the farm that those that ran off would have gotten anchored had it been lead. Even if it wasn't the bulk of the pattern. I know tss has got to be bad stuff because you see to many birds being killed. There is no denying it. All 8 had holes everywhere in their heads. I would love to gain confidence in it though because I would rather hunt with my 20ga than a 12.
Quote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.
Quote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.
Quote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 03:54:35 PMQuote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 02:27:07 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 01:44:11 PMQuote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.They definitely wasn't to far. But I'm not doubting you at all on my part. That's what puzzled me. I'm not a betting man, if I were though I'd be the farm that those that ran off would have gotten anchored had it been lead. Even if it wasn't the bulk of the pattern. I know tss has got to be bad stuff because you see to many birds being killed. There is no denying it. All 8 had holes everywhere in their heads. I would love to gain confidence in it though because I would rather hunt with my 20ga than a 12.For starters....- Which load and gauge? (factory or handload)- Shot size?- Range?I was shooting a 20ga. Apex ninja's #8 1/2 and Rouge #9. They were all 25 to 40 yards
Quote from: bowbird87 on April 02, 2024, 08:05:35 AMShot shells kill by putting as many pellets as possible in the vitals has nothing to do with wound channel or hole size. Will 1 pellet kill a turkey absolutely, but putting 70 in the vitals will do it much more efficiently.
Quote from: Marc on April 02, 2024, 04:30:36 PMQuote from: bowbird87 on April 02, 2024, 08:05:35 AMShot shells kill by putting as many pellets as possible in the vitals has nothing to do with wound channel or hole size. Will 1 pellet kill a turkey absolutely, but putting 70 in the vitals will do it much more efficiently.I do not think that is quite accurate?A single #1 steel pellet traveling all the way through a bird, will do more tissue damage than a single #9 TSS pellet traveling all the way through the bird.It's not a fair comparison to measure tss vs lead damage on a 1 to 1 basis. Most pattern testing I've done on a Turkey target (#9 tss vs 5 and 6 lead mainly longbeard xr) usually at least 2.5 to 1 often higher in the number of strikes in the vitals. So yes 1 to 1 #5 creates more damage. In the real world 9s win in damage by putting 2-3x the pellets in the vitals.Larger wound channels have a greater chance of doing tissue damage than smaller wound channels. Multiple smaller wound channels have a higher chance of causing tissue damage to vitals than a single larger wound channel (which is what I believe your point is).We are not shooting #14 TSS cause at some point the pellets become too small to accomplish what we are hoping. You have to cause enough tissue damage to vital organs for a load to be efficient.While a turkey is relatively large compared to other birds hunted, we are shooting a smaller target. We do not shoot at the body of a turkey, we shoot at the head... We need pellets that are large enough to damage/break vertebrae to be lethal, but small enough to put a lot of pellets in the area (in order to hit).The hardness and increased density both lead to tighter patterns (and less fliers) as well as increased down-range energy... This means that a smaller pellet of higher density will travel further than a large pellet of lesser density... But... a #4 TSS pellet will still travel further than a #9 TSS pellet.
Quote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 04:18:17 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 03:54:35 PMQuote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 02:27:07 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 01:44:11 PMQuote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.They definitely wasn't to far. But I'm not doubting you at all on my part. That's what puzzled me. I'm not a betting man, if I were though I'd be the farm that those that ran off would have gotten anchored had it been lead. Even if it wasn't the bulk of the pattern. I know tss has got to be bad stuff because you see to many birds being killed. There is no denying it. All 8 had holes everywhere in their heads. I would love to gain confidence in it though because I would rather hunt with my 20ga than a 12.For starters....- Which load and gauge? (factory or handload)- Shot size?- Range?I was shooting a 20ga. Apex ninja's #8 1/2 and Rouge #9. They were all 25 to 40 yards Surprised to hear that. Those loads should have been devastating at those ranges.
Quote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 06:59:03 PMQuote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 04:18:17 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 03:54:35 PMQuote from: Jbird22 on April 02, 2024, 02:27:07 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 01:44:11 PMQuote from: dublelung on April 02, 2024, 01:01:52 PMQuote from: Bottomland OG on April 02, 2024, 12:21:20 PMI have always been a lead guy. I loved the Winchester extended range and would still shoot them if they still made it. I'm not debating but really trying to understand more about from all you guys that shoot tss and maybe what I'm doing wrong. I shot tss for the last 2 years and 1 out of 8 birds it killed dead right there, the rest took off running for 30 or 40 yards and just fell over. I've never had that problem with lead. I have switched back to lead because of that. Has anyone else had this problem. The way it looks on paper it seems it would be devastating.If 7 out of 8 gobblers took off running you're not putting the shot where it should go or shooting way too far.They definitely wasn't to far. But I'm not doubting you at all on my part. That's what puzzled me. I'm not a betting man, if I were though I'd be the farm that those that ran off would have gotten anchored had it been lead. Even if it wasn't the bulk of the pattern. I know tss has got to be bad stuff because you see to many birds being killed. There is no denying it. All 8 had holes everywhere in their heads. I would love to gain confidence in it though because I would rather hunt with my 20ga than a 12.For starters....- Which load and gauge? (factory or handload)- Shot size?- Range?I was shooting a 20ga. Apex ninja's #8 1/2 and Rouge #9. They were all 25 to 40 yards Surprised to hear that. Those loads should have been devastating at those ranges.They are on paper, so I know I'm not hitting them with the core. I just don't know enough about tss to say one way or another.