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Started by keehnel1414, April 11, 2014, 12:27:37 PM
Quote from: alclark2 on April 11, 2014, 02:41:26 PMI shoot 3.5" but I agree it's not really necessary. Your 1100 would've worked fine. You'd just have to pattern it and see how tight it shoots. I took a double barrel 20 and patterned it for my wife with 2.75" 6 shot pheasant loads. Front trigger 22 yards and back trigger 28 yards. Just know your limits with your equipment. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: budtripp on April 11, 2014, 12:58:38 PMYour 1100 will work fine. Just get some 2.75" winchester xx mags 6's and see what it'll do on the range. People were killimg toms long before the 3.5 in shell came around. No offense but your buddy doesn't sound very experienced himself or he would know better. For the record I have two 3.5in guns but they are definitely not necessary
Quote from: appalachianstruttstopper on April 11, 2014, 12:45:44 PMI have several 3.5" guns and I shoot only 3" shells in all of them. They all pattern very well out to 40yds with both 3" and 3.5". 3" shells are cheaper and easier to find and the lighter recoil is a bonus IMO. Most of my kills are inside 20yds, and most that are farther could probably be killed at 20yds also if I where to wait for them. That being said, I could kill most of the turkeys I hunt with 2.75" 20 ga modified choke. I will not personally take a shot at a turkey that is out side of 40yds, as a matter of fact, I usually won't take a shot at one any further than 35 in case of error on judgement. Every hunters situation is different by area and I usually put myself in a posistion to where when the gobbler shows up, he is in range unless I am going for the visual decoy method. With decoys I typicaly set them about 20yds from me when possible.Not sure what kind of terrain you will be hunting in your area, but you can use terrain to your advantage when it comes down to moving on a bird and also setting up for the kill.
Quote from: Skeeterbait on April 11, 2014, 03:54:21 PM60 is too far for any setup to guarantee instant kills 100 percent of the time. Too many people are living on the lucky BB. "I killed a bird at 60 yards so I know my gun is a 60 yard gun". Well fact is on any given shot all it takes is one pellet to find the brain and you have a dead bird. You can't guarantee that will happen though 100 percent of the time with any setup at 60 yards.40 yards is a slam dunk 100 percent of the time with a good setup. Some setups will even give you a bit of margin beyond that if you misjudge yardage. That is why we advocate a 40 yard maximum.Difference in 2.75, 3, and 3.5 inch shells is not power or energy, it is number of shot. Longer shells have the POTENTIAL to give more dense patterns because they are pushing heavier payloads of shot. But it is only potential until you take the time to find a gun/choke combination that handles that larger payload well. It is quite possible for a given gun/choke to pattern smaller shot payloads better. Therefore in some gun/choke combinations, a 3" shell may well outpattern a 3.5" shell. 2.75" shells can certainly be turkey killers also. It is all in finding a gun/choke combination that handles it well. In general, the tighter the bore and tighter the choke, the more likely that the gun will handle lighter payloads of shot better than heavier.
Quote from: alclark2 on April 11, 2014, 04:27:41 PM"Did you actually hunt with the 2.75" 6 shot pheasant loads? I have some of that ammo stocked up and if you think that would work I could bring my 1100 for a back up."My example was for her 2.75" 20 gauge. I can't find any 2.75" lead turkey loads for that old gun. Everything is 3". In a 12 gauge you can find the previously suggested 2.75" turkey load. I would get the best you can and skip pheasant loads in your 12 gauge. When you can put 100 pellets in a 10" circle... you've got your effective range. She is going to hunt with this setup in about 2 weeks when our season opens up. I plan to put a decoy at about 10-12 steps so she can use it to range her shot distance. I'd take your stuff to the range and test them at 30,35, 40 yards and see what kind of pattern your putting down. Also, use a big piece of paper or cardboard to check the point of impact. If you try that pheasant load at 30 it might look really good. At 35, it may fall apart. At 40, you may scratch your head and wonder where all the pellets went LOL. Usually, in my experience you get a good pattern out to a certain distance and then it exponentially falls apart. The more time you spend at the range with your guns and different ammo the better. Knowing your guns capability will drop a turkey in its tracks and not wound them with a long distance shot. That's what we're all after I hope. There is a ton of information on here to learn about ammo. If you can find Winchester Long Beard Xrs at the store consider yourself lucky. They shoot very tight and are getting all the hype this year. Second, I'd recommend Federal Turkey Thug ammo. Both of these loads are new in the last two years and put up great patterns. They would be a good place to start in your new gun.
Quote from: keehnel1414 on April 11, 2014, 05:19:58 PMQuote from: Skeeterbait on April 11, 2014, 03:54:21 PM60 is too far for any setup to guarantee instant kills 100 percent of the time. Too many people are living on the lucky BB. "I killed a bird at 60 yards so I know my gun is a 60 yard gun". Well fact is on any given shot all it takes is one pellet to find the brain and you have a dead bird. You can't guarantee that will happen though 100 percent of the time with any setup at 60 yards.40 yards is a slam dunk 100 percent of the time with a good setup. Some setups will even give you a bit of margin beyond that if you misjudge yardage. That is why we advocate a 40 yard maximum.Difference in 2.75, 3, and 3.5 inch shells is not power or energy, it is number of shot. Longer shells have the POTENTIAL to give more dense patterns because they are pushing heavier payloads of shot. But it is only potential until you take the time to find a gun/choke combination that handles that larger payload well. It is quite possible for a given gun/choke to pattern smaller shot payloads better. Therefore in some gun/choke combinations, a 3" shell may well outpattern a 3.5" shell. 2.75" shells can certainly be turkey killers also. It is all in finding a gun/choke combination that handles it well. In general, the tighter the bore and tighter the choke, the more likely that the gun will handle lighter payloads of shot better than heavier.I did not know this. Thought it was all about distance and more powder charge. Ok, that helps a great deal. I knew all about the patterning and finding the right combination between gun, choke, and ammo.