I would suggest the gun makers have won this round when "young-ish" hunters (I'm 58 and have hunted waterfowl since I was 15, only ever with 2 3/4" chambers) think/feel that somehow a 2 3/4" chambered gun is somehow inadequate for hunting geese. "Better get out there and buy one of the new and improved".....sound like an ad for Tide.
At least the OP is asking.
I am older than you and hunted a bit longer and remember the LEAD days and wish they never left.
That is what you are comparing LEAD 2 3/4 to steel which is apples and oranges
I will never forget the first year they switched to steel it almost stopped me hunting birds since it would not kill and I was using 3" BB, cripples everywhere. In fact I switched to bismuth for three years after then started reloading my own steel since the factory stuff was trash back then
The steel has come a long way over the years once they realized speed kills and lead wads are no good for steel shot but still not as good as even a 2 3/4 lead
Bottom line if the OP is not taking close shots under 30 yards yes he is at a disadvantage shooting 2 3/4 steel loads with today's ammunition
Cheers
I am older than you and hunted a bit longer and remember the LEAD days and wish they never left.
That is what you are comparing LEAD 2 3/4 to steel which is apples and oranges
I will never forget the first year they switched to steel it almost stopped me hunting birds since it would not kill and I was using 3" BB, cripples everywhere. In fact I switched to bismuth for three years after then started reloading my own steel since the factory stuff was trash back then
The steel has come a long way over the years once they realized speed kills and lead wads are no good for steel shot but still not as good as even a 2 3/4 lead
Bottom line if the OP is not taking close shots under 30 yards yes he is at a disadvantage shooting 2 3/4 steel loads with today's ammunition
Cheers
I found no difference at all the first year we were mandated to non-toxic loads and the ammo available then had not undergone the speed craze. I shot Winchester 1 oz#2's that first year and pummeled birds easily. Shoot within your own and your load/guns limitations and birds die cleanly. All the whiners about not being allowed lead shot that I ever knew couldn't hit a bear in the ass with a scoop shovel or exercise range restraint and wounded as many with lead as with steel. The ammo and gun are only as proficient as the aiming system behind it!!
So...we just ran a thread railing about the virtues of the 10ga and how it absolutely kills geese stone dead out to 70yards. Now we are discussing how the 3.5" 12 ga is way overkill and you only need 2 3/4" shells.
I agree with the rule of thumb "know your gun and shoot within its limits". I just wonder about all the apparent contractions.
I suppose at the end of the day, we all have opinions. Often, that's all they are.
That may all be true but it's never been a problem for me. Why? Because as soon as I realized how crappy steel was I switched to Bismuth and then Tungsten. Costly but still a manageable expense as a percentage of my annual costs relating to hunting.
Challenge makes a 2 3/4" 1 1/16oz 1500fps shell that comes in BB, 2 ,4 and does every thing I want it to do . the plain and simple fact is if YOU shoot at birds that are in YOUR range and YOU put the shot pattern on the bird . there is a high % chance you will kill that bird in the air . to go with that you need to do some pattern work to find a good choke and shell combo .
Agreed...Not to disagree with the apparent contradictions but....this thread was about whether a 2 3/4" gun could be suitable as a goose gun. The answer, as noted by many here, is yes.
I don't think anyone is saying there aren't other guns, with different chambering, that aren't great goose guns. But one doesn't "have" to have a 3" or 3 1/2" 12 gauge to shoot geese.
Those were the years I would spend weeks hunting in pei and it even made the local news there since they had never seen so many wounded birds in town around summerside. You would pound a bird to watch it fly away and fall out of the group many fields over
The cripples we found just setting up our spreads from previous hunts was unreal
The steel was terrible because it was basically using all lead components at that time and we were clueless what chokes we should be using for it
Not sure why you didnot see it and I am not talking taking long shots here. Any how I seen enough that year to switch to bismuth or I was done waterfowl hunting
Cheers
Oh yes I could hit a bear in the ass in those days as well as the guys I shared the blind with. All were seasoned trap and skeet shooters
Yes I agree and if that works for you cool but even reloading when one shoots flats a year not boxes the costs are way too high
Finding rsi and their reloads was my solution
Cheers
Also where are you getting your bismuth since they took the original stuff off the market a few years back. I know they are making a new composition bismuth the lst 2 years but have not seen any for sale in canada yet either factory ammo or shot for reloading. I been wanting to get some





























