I shoot a Kicks High Flyer in my waterfowl gun and really like the patterns it throws
I found a test that Field and Stream completed in an underground range. They tested ported vs non ported chokes and found that the ported chokes were 4 db louder then non ported chokes. To put that into perspective, breathing measures in at 10 db and is considered barely audible. I seriously doubt one would even notice the difference of 4 db
https://www.fieldandstream.com/shotgun-choke-test#page-2
http://www.industrialnoisecontrol.com/comparative-noise-examples.htm
Would be interesting if anyone finds another test that confirms or contradicts this test. Also wonder what the effect would be if performed outside and not underground
Decibels of sound do not increase at a linear rate for instance even though 10 db is barely audible, 80 db is twice as loud as 70 db and 100 db is 8 times as loud as 70 db. So a 4 db increase can be a significant increase depending on what db range it is in.
Prudent hunters and competitors don't take unnecessary and foolish risks.
For a few years we used Kicks High Flier Ported chokes for big water divers... they just threw really nice patterns with heavy steel... I never held up a decibel meter, but the consensus is that they did not increase the noise or debris laterally, we mostly shot out of boat blinds s and tight rock blinds, and we fired thousands of rounds through them... I suspect that fretting over a ported choke is "much ado about nothing."
Very true, and that would be intensified doing the test underground where sound waves cannot escape an enclosed environment. If this test was done outside in a real world hunting situation, what effect would that have on the results? I have not found anything conclusive either way
So why are chokes ported ?
Jimmy Muller of Muller chokes says that manufacturers port their chokes because the majority of shooters dont like the added weight of extended chokes at the muzzle. Porting or fluting them helps keep their weight down
Jimmy Muller obviously doesn't have a clue. The amount of weight removed by porting chokes is in the order of a few percent of the added weight of the chokes. I don't know a single shooter who cares about the weight of the choke tubes. Without exception, everyone on the firing line at an an international trap event is familiar with the extra loud retort from ports. We all witnessed injuries caused by pellets flying wild because of them. This is why they're outlawed in international competition. This isn't simply my opinion, these are facts.
While I agree that the porting of choke tubes amounts to a very a small reduction of weight, any change in weight is significant when it's out on the end of your barrels. And I think that Jimmy Muller knows more about choke tubes than most people.
Jimmy Muller obviously doesn't have a clue. The amount of weight removed by porting chokes is in the order of a few percent of the added weight of the chokes. I don't know a single shooter who cares about the weight of the choke tubes. Without exception, everyone on the firing line at an an international trap event is familiar with the extra loud retort from ports. We all witnessed injuries caused by pellets flying wild because of them. This is why they're outlawed in international competition. This isn't simply my opinion, these are facts.
I think Jimmy Muller knows a hell of a lot more about his business then you do



























