Belgian Brownings uses and collectibility

Tucker.Grose

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With the requirements of steel shot for waterfowl and even upland birds in certain areas, it seems like the wonderful Belgian made Superposed, Auto-5, and others are seeing less time out of the gun box.
I’m curious to hear about the ways the older Belgian Browning’s are being used and some discussion about their collectibility.
Who loves them?!
 
I have a Superposed 20 gauge in my safe along with another dozen or so vintage shotguns from various makers. None of them are safe for steel. I shoot lead, bismuth and Tungsten TM. Not a problem. You just have to be organized and not try to buy shells at the last minute at Crappy Tire.
 
The A5 I inherited has a slug barrel as well so it still gets use deer hunting. My grandfather also had the barrel reamed to a modified choke so he shot steel no issues.
 
A Superposed Skeet or Broadway Trap still do the job they were designed for.
Most upland hunting is still done with lead shot.
A Superposed Lightning 20 gauge is one of the best upland guns ever made.
 
I've got a 1960s A5 with the barrel opened up to modified and shoot steel in it all the time.
 
I’d like to use the Superposed for waterfowl but the price of bismuth has held me back.
Mine is mod/full. Don’t want to be limited to running small shot through the mod barrel only and a little leary of having the full barrel opened up more without a bit more anecdotal evidence that things aren’t going to get wrecked after a few hundred shots.
 
Assuming your own one of these already... if you're the kind of person who makes your shots count and shoots game well in range, then paying for bismuth in a classic gun will be economically advantageous for a considerable period over the acquisition cost of a new steel-capable gun. Plus, you are at a ballistic advantage using the bismuth also. You will still find that it has a certain range where it changes from an indomitable duck-slayer to more-or-less ineffective, but all shotguns seem to have that threshold somewhere. The bismuth will take that further than steel, tungsten-polymer just slightly farther, and pure tungsten way out there.

If you don't spend a considerable amount of time and money on clays leading up to the season, and/or you find yourself blasting away at improbable shots, you might find the economy to change against your favour. When we had days where I was off my game, things added up to a considerable expense over the reward. On the other hand, the good days could be quite exceptional. The best example of that was a day where a four-man duck limit was shot, and upon cleaning the ducks we found that I had shot all of them with my tungsten-matrix #5's and none of the steel shot from the other guys were present. While that is easy to blame on the ammo, it is also relevant that I had been shooting skeet all fall and my partners had not. I don't think that I am naturally a better shot than them, but the practice seemed to pay off.

So the moral of the story is that making shots count using shells of a high cost, backing that up with more of an expense in cheap practice, is an effective way to approach the waterfowl game. On the other hand, shooting more at a lot of waterfowl with cheap steel is another common strategy. The former is definitely my choice on how to proceed, but that is for more of an odd reason: I like my older over-under (and just now getting more into english doubles) better than most modern guns, and I had to make that work somehow. I figure that the cost of expensive ammo is cheaper than the cost of another gun (plus I get to hunt with the same gun that I become comfortable at skeet with), even though I am comfortable with he thought of buying a new semi if the price of bismuth ever took a sharp rise.
 
I shoot ducks and geese with several SxS vintage guns much older than any Superposed, and a couple of replica arms as well.
I simply take loading Bismuth as a necessary evil, however II do like the way that Bismuth and Nice Shot work on birds, they seem to do as goo or better a job that steel for me.
Cat
 
I went with an A5 modified choke Belgian a couple years ago and enjoyed shooting it so much i picked up both a slug and invector barrel for it. Patiently found all the chokes for it. Makes for a beautiful shotgun for everything.
 
I use my Belgium made Mag 20 for small game and upland, awesome pheasant gun. Also use it for some ducks with bismuth shells. I also have a slug barrel for it that I could use for deer hunting. Great gun that's unstoppable, they don't make'um like this anymore.
 
Despite the number of posts, the Auto5 is not as impressive an achievement as the Superposed shotgun.
I had one, it worked, I even shot it well. Not my style - homely beyond measure.
Just one man's opinion.
 
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