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Started by Yoteduster, May 24, 2019, 12:33:57 PM
Quote from: jryser on May 25, 2019, 12:36:12 PMI love lead. Killed a pile of turkeys with #5 Winchester Supremes in my SBE II. I love TSS. The ONLY reason I prefer TSS is I really enjoy loading my own and learning to make em better every time. There is something about killing a turkey with a shell I made (or watching someone else kill one with a shell I made!) that just adds to the excitement of the entire ball of wax right down to eating em!!!Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Bowguy on May 25, 2019, 07:10:53 PMQuote from: jryser on May 25, 2019, 12:36:12 PMI love lead. Killed a pile of turkeys with #5 Winchester Supremes in my SBE II. I love TSS. The ONLY reason I prefer TSS is I really enjoy loading my own and learning to make em better every time. There is something about killing a turkey with a shell I made (or watching someone else kill one with a shell I made!) that just adds to the excitement of the entire ball of wax right down to eating em!!!Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI fully understand loading and the idea of shooting shells you've made. Kinda adds more of you into it. The TSS aren't necessary for that. You could load any type shells if the only reason you use TSS is cause of loading
Quote from: Spitten and drummen on May 25, 2019, 09:01:09 AMWith a 12ga. I personally would stick with lead. I started handloading Tss 6 or 7 years ago for a 20ga to test it out. I have not toted a 12 since. The stuff is devestating. Some people scoff at it because of the price. Thing is , you are not dove hunting with the stuff. No doubt that shooting it through a 12ga would be extremely potent. I would put my 20 loaded with it up against any 12ga. The 20 with Tss exceeds the capability of a 12 ga with lead. It retains a pile more energy , does not deform and patterns are unbelievable. A tss #9 is on par with a lead #4 . You also can get alot more number 9s in a hull than number 4s. Lead has accounted for truckloads of birds and are very effective. #9 Tss just does it better.
Quote from: owlhoot on May 25, 2019, 08:53:18 PMQuote from: Bowguy on May 25, 2019, 07:10:53 PMQuote from: jryser on May 25, 2019, 12:36:12 PMI love lead. Killed a pile of turkeys with #5 Winchester Supremes in my SBE II. I love TSS. The ONLY reason I prefer TSS is I really enjoy loading my own and learning to make em better every time. There is something about killing a turkey with a shell I made (or watching someone else kill one with a shell I made!) that just adds to the excitement of the entire ball of wax right down to eating em!!!Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI fully understand loading and the idea of shooting shells you've made. Kinda adds more of you into it. The TSS aren't necessary for that. You could load any type shells if the only reason you use TSS is cause of loadingWas wondering about the loading and why no one seems to hand load HW7 or Hevi7 ? Or even the lead 7 1/2 loads to replace the old federal some of you swear by with the high pellets counts it used to have?
Quote from: owlhoot on May 25, 2019, 08:54:49 PMQuote from: Spitten and drummen on May 25, 2019, 09:01:09 AMWith a 12ga. I personally would stick with lead. I started handloading Tss 6 or 7 years ago for a 20ga to test it out. I have not toted a 12 since. The stuff is devestating. Some people scoff at it because of the price. Thing is , you are not dove hunting with the stuff. No doubt that shooting it through a 12ga would be extremely potent. I would put my 20 loaded with it up against any 12ga. The 20 with Tss exceeds the capability of a 12 ga with lead. It retains a pile more energy , does not deform and patterns are unbelievable. A tss #9 is on par with a lead #4 . You also can get alot more number 9s in a hull than number 4s. Lead has accounted for truckloads of birds and are very effective. #9 Tss just does it better.The hardness of the Tss is much greater than lead. It retaines energy much greater than the lead. The hardness and diameter being smaller along with the retained energy equals greater penatration. Im not a load specialist and relied on the info that was passed on to me. I have tested Tss against lead and do have first hand knowlege on the penetration. Basically I was meaning that the energy in a TSS #9 is compatable to a lead #4. We strive for great patterns along with penitration and the TSS gives those. The only reason I would stick with lead is carrying a 12. The Tss shines with smaller gauges and makes the 20 just as effective as the 12 at 12 gauge distances.Please explain how a tss 9 is on par with a lead 4?
Quote from: jryser on May 25, 2019, 09:10:09 PMQuote from: owlhoot on May 25, 2019, 08:53:18 PMQuote from: Bowguy on May 25, 2019, 07:10:53 PMQuote from: jryser on May 25, 2019, 12:36:12 PMI love lead. Killed a pile of turkeys with #5 Winchester Supremes in my SBE II. I love TSS. The ONLY reason I prefer TSS is I really enjoy loading my own and learning to make em better every time. There is something about killing a turkey with a shell I made (or watching someone else kill one with a shell I made!) that just adds to the excitement of the entire ball of wax right down to eating em!!!Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI fully understand loading and the idea of shooting shells you've made. Kinda adds more of you into it. The TSS aren't necessary for that. You could load any type shells if the only reason you use TSS is cause of loadingWas wondering about the loading and why no one seems to hand load HW7 or Hevi7 ? Or even the lead 7 1/2 loads to replace the old federal some of you swear by with the high pellets counts it used to have?One word. RECIPESSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk