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Started by SumToy, March 14, 2011, 08:19:03 PM
Quote from: fountain on March 14, 2011, 09:35:57 PMwhat constriction? i have a .555 and some nitros destined for an 870 eventually!
Quote from: link=topic=4378.msg53153#msg53153 date=1300210463Quote from: SumToy on March 15, 2011, 01:07:00 PM I have just got into the deal of how wide the pattern is the past few. This open my eyes up to the point of if he moves or you move he is gone. That is one thing this target did show me. I think you're right.Some guys focus in too much on the "kill zone" or a 10" circle, without thinking in terms of the what-ifs. That's exactly why I look at 20" circle, as well as what is on the outside of it. There are probably more turkeys killed with the margins of a pattern than the core of it. And lots of missed turkeys would have come home in the truck if they had shot a different shell or choke or both to achieve a dense 20" killing pattern.
Quote from: SumToy on March 15, 2011, 01:07:00 PM I have just got into the deal of how wide the pattern is the past few. This open my eyes up to the point of if he moves or you move he is gone. That is one thing this target did show me.
Quote from: shootumindaface on March 15, 2011, 01:38:06 PMQuote from: link=topic=4378.msg53153#msg53153 date=1300210463Quote from: SumToy on March 15, 2011, 01:07:00 PM I have just got into the deal of how wide the pattern is the past few. This open my eyes up to the point of if he moves or you move he is gone. That is one thing this target did show me. I think you're right.Some guys focus in too much on the "kill zone" or a 10" circle, without thinking in terms of the what-ifs. That's exactly why I look at 20" circle, as well as what is on the outside of it. There are probably more turkeys killed with the margins of a pattern than the core of it. And lots of missed turkeys would have come home in the truck if they had shot a different shell or choke or both to achieve a dense 20" killing pattern.Hal I just posted in another thread about this concerning the Feds in the 20 gauge.. Guys are looking for that 180 or so in the ten inch, what they dont realize is that leaves roughly 140 pellets to occupy the 100 extra inches that another 5 inches gives ya for a 15 inch circle.. The 12s are a different animal with the heavy payloads and pellet counts, but the 20 is a different animal.
Quote from: link=topic=4378.msg53094#msg53094 date=1300207019Quote from: old frank on March 14, 2011, 08:40:07 PMI have always tested my loads/sights/guns on a turkey target because,to me,that is what counts. Here's my 2 cents.The problem with shooting the small turkey head targets and counting holes in the "kill zone" is two-fold.First off, you can't see enough of the pattern to determine if you are seeing the core of the pattern, or the edge of it. It's a basic POA vs POI question. Are those numbers bad or good because of your combo, or because the pattern on that particular shot with that particular shell and choke was more on target because you held it on better? Or is that shell or choke shooting to a different point than the other shell or choke? That happens all the time. There is no way of knowing any of that if you shoot at a small target. You still don't know hardly anything at all about what your pattern is doing.Secondly, if you get comfort from having lots of pellets in the "kill zone" of a turkey target in one fixed position, you need to broaden your perspective and think of it logically and realistically. What if the turkey was facing the other way? What if your aim was slightly off to the left or to the right? Or a little high, or a little low? You will never get the exact same pellet distribution with another shot anyway. And its very unlikely a turkey you shoot at will be in that same exact position for you. So it's a false sense of security to count holes in the "kill zone" of a small turkey head target when the turkey's head is never going to be in that exact position with the exact sme pellet destribution ever again. It's much better to think in terms of seeing if there is any place a turkey's head or neck could slip through that pattern without dying, and how big is my reall killing pattern? I like to see a 20" pattern with no chance any turkey could survive it even if I was off ten inches one way or the other with my aim at 40 yds. But that's possible only after I have determined the POA and POI, and can compensate for or correct any difference between the two.Once you have confirmed that the POA and POI are one in the same with a big paper target, then shooting a small turkey head target won't mislead you as badly. But you will very easily get bad and inaccurate information, and then make the wrong decision based on that bad info, simply because you used the small target instead of big paper.
Quote from: old frank on March 14, 2011, 08:40:07 PMI have always tested my loads/sights/guns on a turkey target because,to me,that is what counts.