- Location
- Ft. Mac. Alberta
The length of the barrel has nothing to do with the pattern or the range, but longer barrels certainly do dampen sudden movements, thus helping with the swing. As for longer sighting plane, you are not supposed be looking at at the barrel. You don't aim a shotgun. You point it !
I will attempt explain this for those that are wondering about Otis's post
Although the shotgun is pointed and not directly aimed, you still see the barrel in your peripheral view, and that is why people mention the longer sighting plane.
It is not nearly so important as whether or not the gun swings smoothly however, but still it is a minor factor.
There has been a trend in the past 20 years or so ( maybe more) for longer barrels in skeet , where in years gone by the 28 and sometimes even 26" barrels were very common. nowadays most dedicated skeet guns can have 30" or even longer barrels at times.
It's because of the swing being concentrated on - that and the fact that someone probably won some major championships with longer barrels and the crown jumped on the band wagon!

Sighting plane matters far more in rifle shooting where the sights are aimed directly and the distance between the sights helps , but with receiver sights and globe fronts they are still not in direct focus, the target itself should be.
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