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Started by allaboutshooting, January 20, 2017, 10:47:45 AM
Quote from: nickp on January 30, 2017, 12:36:17 PMClark, I have a question on the "killing power" of this load in 6's. At 1,000 fps, does the saying of dense pattern still ring true at the longer distances? We know that the 12 gauge 6's at 1200 fps can do it at the longer ranges, but lets say at the the longer range you had 100 6's out of the 12 and 100 6's out of that 20 load in a pie plate. Would those 20 gauge 6's still kill like the 12 gauge 6's would, with 200 fps less? I think that this is the main concern facing this load. 1.25 oz of 5's leaves lower numbers, but 6's is enough for those misjudged shots with the way the patterns hold up. It seems to be a matter now of with that lower velocity, will they still do the same kind of damage as the big brother? I have noticed that you mentioned something along the lines of the retained speed at longer ranges being the same or more than the faster loads, is that correct? If so, then this should be a great little load as the "killing power" would seem to be the same.
Quote from: allaboutshooting on January 30, 2017, 05:16:57 PMQuote from: nickp on January 30, 2017, 12:36:17 PMClark, I have a question on the "killing power" of this load in 6's. At 1,000 fps, does the saying of dense pattern still ring true at the longer distances? We know that the 12 gauge 6's at 1200 fps can do it at the longer ranges, but lets say at the the longer range you had 100 6's out of the 12 and 100 6's out of that 20 load in a pie plate. Would those 20 gauge 6's still kill like the 12 gauge 6's would, with 200 fps less? I think that this is the main concern facing this load. 1.25 oz of 5's leaves lower numbers, but 6's is enough for those misjudged shots with the way the patterns hold up. It seems to be a matter now of with that lower velocity, will they still do the same kind of damage as the big brother? I have noticed that you mentioned something along the lines of the retained speed at longer ranges being the same or more than the faster loads, is that correct? If so, then this should be a great little load as the "killing power" would seem to be the same. Very good questions and observations. At 40 yards, round pellets launched at 1200 fps and 1000 fps will have just about the same terminal speed and the same terminal energy. The more quickly a sphere is launched, the more quickly it slows. The only difference in a typical 12 gauge turkey load and a typical 20 gauge turkey load is the number of pellets in the shot charge. The "killing power" per pellet is the same.Thanks,Clark
QuoteClark, you always seem to have good info. Not saying this isn't. But the faster a sphere is launched thing isn't making sense to me. Say you have a base ball. Throw it 20 miles an hour, another thrown 90 miles an hour. The 90 mile an hour ball is sure to go farther, hit harder. It might shed velocity percentage wise, I'm still not sure why but I'm keeping an open mind since your posts are usually spot on. Just can't see how 200 feet per second more could slow down n wait up for slower spheres.Btw I'm not a fan of extreme speed, just trying to get what you're saying
Quote from: drenalinld on February 02, 2017, 04:50:42 PMTo add to that "physics" question does staying under the speed of sound make shotgun loads more consistent?Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk