Advice wanted 12g Ammo for home family Care

Admin. Can you please close this thread down.

It`s been answered

Thanks



What?

OP, you opened the door wide open with "12g ammo for family security Not putting large holes in things"...
Now that its starting to get philosophical, empirical, and just plain educational you want to slam the door shut in our face?
As per Greta: "How dare you!"
As per Biden: "C'mon man!"

Rather than crying "Mom" like a socialist for more free things, it much wiser to just sit back (beer or scotch optional); to reflect on the essence of your opening post and better; to assimilate the wisdom and experience shared by fellow gunners.

Nothing screams family care better that a good ol' Rem 870 as initially stated but you can't stop here. What about semi-auto? Full stock, no stock or pistol grip? Same ammo for clays, paper, turkeys, geese, dogs, rapists, thieve & bears?
 
Hello

Not sure if this is the right place to post this, if not please admin. move it. Thanks.

I am a New owner of a Rem 870 12g with No prior shotgun owing experience. Did shoot trap for fun before a little bit, friends shotgun.

Can anyone suggest a 12g ammo for family security Not putting large holes in things and with as least amount of recoil for family members use.

Thanks
George

For in-home family care, use the same ammo you use for trap. Just double, triple or quadruple tap it, as necessary. If in doubt, carry 5 x 00 buck (Flight Control or not) in the side saddle.

Remember, as much as possible, you don’t want to paint your walls.

Now if you were a NYPD SWAT, your needs would likely be better served by other loads.
 
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What?

OP, you opened the door wide open with "12g ammo for family security Not putting large holes in things"...
Now that its starting to get philosophical, empirical, and just plain educational you want to slam the door shut in our face?
As per Greta: "How dare you!"
As per Biden: "C'mon man!"

Rather than crying "Mom" like a socialist for more free things, it much wiser to just sit back (beer or scotch optional); to reflect on the essence of your opening post and better; to assimilate the wisdom and experience shared by fellow gunners.

Nothing screams family care better that a good ol' Rem 870 as initially stated but you can't stop here. What about semi-auto? Full stock, no stock or pistol grip? Same ammo for clays, paper, turkeys, geese, dogs, rapists, thieve & bears?

well said.:stirthepot2::sucks::cheers:we haven't got into chokes yet.
 
I've found 3.5" buckshot to be a #### ton extra recoil and a massive spread with a lot of flyers. At 25 yds Winchester Super X 3.5" 18 pellet 00 Buck put 9 pellets on paper. Comparatively, Winchester Super X 2 3/4" 9 pellet 00 Buck put 9 pellets on paper. Same velocity, half the recoil or less. The other fun factor would be lighting up the room like a flashbang and blowing everyones eardrums out. Great way to start a fight lol. I'll take 2 3/4 almost every time. Watch a bunch of Paul Harrel's videos, bigger is definitely not always better.
 
Best Family Care thread ever. :rockOn:



As responsible parent and care provider, I think appropriate to first ask predators if anti-vaxer types.

Just for them, its always good to have a few shots prepared. Make sure projectiles are dipped in a good variety of vaccines. Like she said, just the tip.



iu
 
I was reflecting(*) on family care and the opportunity of predators self-invite...

Then BAM! Yes good Sir, it hit me like Revenue Canada on hard working people:

If the precious half is regularly hinting on redecorating the house, drop the ol' 870 and grab one of those. I kid you not, its Non restricted too!
I swear to both Valhalla and Crom, no more worries for putting large holes in things and recoil.
Conveniently on sale at one of our sponsor here

Problem solved right here on CGN and for free. (Man I love this place)

(*) Free translation: sucking on a hefty dram of scotch

x15-silver-flamethrower.png




iu
 
Hello

Not sure if this is the right place to post this, if not please admin. move it. Thanks.

I am a New owner of a Rem 870 12g with No prior shotgun owing experience. Did shoot trap for fun before a little bit, friends shotgun.

Can anyone suggest a 12g ammo for family security Not putting large holes in things and with as least amount of recoil for family members use.

Thanks
George

This topic has been hashed out on this forum and countless others and in bars and basements and hunt camps since forever. You have to weed through a lifetimes worth of information and utter BS to get to some sound advice. Here's my 2 cents, worth exactly what you paid for it, hopefully there is a nugget of wisdom in there somewhere.



I'll prefix with... If you can prevent having to use a weapon for "family security" i strongly suggest you do that. Security in depth. Dogs, alarms, good locks, hell uprooting your family and moving across country to a safer neighborhood is a better option than a gunfight in your home at 3am.

All that to say, even though the chances are slim to none it will never happen, if it gets to the point of the last straw, you do not want to be handicapped here, as things have probably gone so sideways, your abilities may very well be be handicapped as well.

Normally 99% of the time, for someone in your situation, i would "strongly" recommend a 9mm (or other) Pistol Caliber carbine (cough cough Ruger PC9) for family security. Light, handy, low recoil and blast. Fast follow up shots. Cheap (and fun!) to practice with. Easy to load in the dark. Insert mag, run charging handle. Safety on/safety off.


The shotgun is an immensely effective "family security" tool, it is also the most difficult to use, especially under stress. I have more professional training and practice behind a shotgun than any other platform, and its still not my first choice.

People often chose the shotgun for FS because it's cheap (compared to pretty much every other firearm out there) $250 will get you a reliable tool for the job. Those same people generally buy a box of whatever 00 was on sale, stick it in a corner and maybe fire a few rounds of birdshot off every year.

Loading a shotgun tube under stress, in the dark, in the bedroom closet is difficult at best, and might be what gets you dead in the end.

Recoil, even a 20 gauge, with EFFECTIVE loads is a harsh reality for a small statured shooter, so is muzzle blast and concussion, so is short stroking a pump. Anything heavy enough to tame the recoil will be front heavy or louder.

On ammo selection.

Too many people will tell you to use birdshot for self defense... and ive read and heard all the arguments over and over ad nauseum. The biggest one being overpenetration. Here's the thing, if it wont penetrate the drywall in your house... it wont stop a bad guy! Sure, a load of number 6 birdshot is devastating at contact range, so is a blank round, so is 00 buck. But birdshot is probably not effective (or not effective enough) at 21 feet. Im not betting my life and families life on waiting for someone getting that close.

If you really want to go that route... the best advice i can give you, or anyone, is pattern your load in YOUR gun at 3 yards, 5 yards, 10 yards and at the MAXIMUM distance you might have to shoot inside your house... or your property. At the maximum distance inside my house, i cannot keep every pellet of birdshot on an ipsc target. That is NOT an effective load.

Patterning goes for buckshot too! Though i can save you a lot of time and tell you to just go and buy Federal or Hornady "low-recoil" 00 or #4 buck with the "flite-control" or "versatite wad". But i still want you to pattern it in your gun!. 3am down the hallway in your birthday suit and flipflops and someone is holding a gun to your kids head is not the time to find out your shotgun throws it's pattern 4" to the left!

Slugs... short of dropping a 500lb JDAM on your house... a 12 gauge slug is probably the most effective fight stopper there is.... standard "doctrine" is to load with buck and have a slug or 2 on the gun for extreme need.... thing is, performing a select slug drill, in the middle of a firefight... hell even topping off the tube with one... isn't a trivial task to get right. 2 way ranges don't lend themselves to mistakes very well. I still keep slugs handy... more likely to just load the tube with them straightaway... overkill is under rated anyway...

PUT A LIGHT ON YOUR GUN!

I know.... TL:DR...
 
a friend once told me to go birdshot/#7 target load first 00 buck next and slug third. His rational was if getting peppered by the first round wasn't enough to make the threat rethink it's action the 00 certainly would, if the 00 didn't stop the threat the slug will.




Great idea... until the perp stabs you with his knife or shoots you with his Hi-point while you are loading your next round... i'd rather stop #### with the first round fired...
 
.....All that to say, even though the chances are slim to none it will never happen.....*happened next door some years ago...*

Normally 99% of the time, for someone in your situation, i would "strongly" recommend a 9mm (or other) Pistol Caliber carbine (cough cough Ruger PC9) for family security. Light, handy, low recoil and blast. Fast follow up shots. Cheap (and fun!) to practice with. Easy to load in the dark. Insert mag, run charging handle. Safety on/safety off. *I would suggest a Glock 20 or 21 in a finger print activated bedside vault also containing a loaded mag. Two seconds to open. Insert mag, rack, point and shoot.*

Loading a shotgun tube under stress, in the dark, in the bedroom closet is difficult at best, and might be what gets you dead in the end. *See above suggestion*

Recoil, even a 20 gauge, with EFFECTIVE loads is a harsh reality for a small statured shooter, so is muzzle blast and concussion, so is short stroking a pump. Anything heavy enough to tame the recoil will be front heavy or louder. *In such a stressful situation, where the adrenaline is full bore, these are non issues*

....But birdshot is probably not effective (or not effective enough) at 21 feet. *Really.....?? Ahem....7 yards....12 gauge ya it would remove an arm or leg or leave a can size hole in your perp...*

..... is holding a gun to your kids head is not the time to find out your shotgun throws it's pattern 4" to the left! *No kids in house*

PUT A LIGHT ON YOUR GUN! *Or don't. That is the first thing your perp will see and react to...and shoot at,, so you better get off the first shot...* /QUOTE]

Just my humble opinions....cheers guys and stay safe...!
 
I was reflecting(*) on family care and the opportunity of predators self-invite...

Then BAM! Yes good Sir, it hit me like Revenue Canada on hard working people:

If the precious half is regularly hinting on redecorating the house, drop the ol' 870 and grab one of those. I kid you not, its Non restricted too!
I swear to both Valhalla and Crom, no more worries for putting large holes in things and recoil.
Conveniently on sale at one of our sponsor here

Problem solved right here on CGN and for free. (Man I love this place)

(*) Free translation: sucking on a hefty dram of scotch

x15-silver-flamethrower.png




iu

Haha, I was looking at this last spring and have decided to build one this winter. Living in a country acreage community, this would be ideal for clearing ice off parts of my driveway and ohhhh, how I'd love the see the reaction of my snooty neighbours. :D
 
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