Chefboubou
Member
- Location
- Quebec City
I will lend you mine if you want to shoot some hairy shells. You and I know it won't be your first and only shotgun.
My safe could hold 10.... I wonder how fast I'll get there (if I can get my RPAL)!
I will lend you mine if you want to shoot some hairy shells. You and I know it won't be your first and only shotgun.
I know but the option costs 25% more...
I have fired one box of 3" steel out of my 3 1/2" chamber and I noticed significant dents in the forcing cone when cleaning it. I decided not to do that again. But...you guys that have shot a lot of 3" or 2.75" steel out of a 3.5....can you let me know what your forcing cones look like. See if I will change my mind. It would be nice to save some money and use 3's.
Oh my.....wish I could afford several THOUSAND ROUNDS....hunting....
....again several (perhaps tens of..) THOUSAND ROUNDS......goosh....
...the clay pigeon carnage and or duck/goose slaughter....my o my...
Sarcastic bastard, aren't you. Lmao
Recoil.
Take, for example, a "BPS Mossy Oak Shadow Grass Blades" off the browning website. 8.3 lbs with the 3.5" chamber.
The kind of guy shooting this might tend to initially stock up on something like a 3-1/2" Blackcloud load, 1.5oz@1500fps.
That's 656 grains. A muzzle energy of 3277 ft.lbs.
Estimating the recoil of this combo, I'm getting about 48 ft.lbs.
Looking at the "rifle recoil table" on the chuck hawks site, that puts you over the hottest .45-70 or .375H&H loads in recoil, and in the middle of the range of stuff like .416 rem mag, .416 rigby, .458 win mag, etc.
My point is that you would be shooting an elephant gun all day. If you stick to lighter loads, you're stuck using a sub-optimal gun with more weight, a longer receiver, longer distance from shell to forcing cone, etc.
Anyway, I'm considering selling my 3" BPS. It might go on the EE in the next couple of weeks, for cheaper than those new ones you're looking at.
I have fired one box of 3" steel out of my 3 1/2" chamber and I noticed significant dents in the forcing cone when cleaning it. I decided not to do that again. But...you guys that have shot a lot of 3" or 2.75" steel out of a 3.5....can you let me know what your forcing cones look like. See if I will change my mind. It would be nice to save some money and use 3's.
Really? Now I'm curious what sort of gun. Shouldn't happen.



























