Rifled choke

rci

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Anybody have any experience with these? If they can shoot the sabot rounds why would anybody buy a rifled barrel? Do they shoot differently?
 
Yes they shoot differently. You only have the length of the choke tube to impart spin as opposed to 20+ inches of rifling. The rifled tube is inferior to a fully rifled barrel for shooting sabots. Less spin results in less accuracy at longer range.
 
Different hunting scenarios will usually dictate choice of appropriate tools (read firearms). For example - if Whitetail Deer hunting will usually involve close range shooting out to 65 yards +/- then a smoothbore shotgun equipped with a rifled choke (or even with a plain choke such as IC) will serve very well - provided one has taken the time to optimize performance by matching a particular brand of slug to a particular shotgun (bbl).

Saboted slugs in rifled bbl'd shotguns will serve very well in terms of long(er) range as well as accuracy (read 100 yards +). However, due to the design those slugs will perform very poorly in smoothbores.
 
Great comments, I'm getting out for the shotgun hunt for whitetail here in ontario. What would be a good slug to use with an 8 year old 870 express 12ga., with a Carlson extended choke?
 
Anybody have any experience with these? If they can shoot the sabot rounds why would anybody buy a rifled barrel? Do they shoot differently?

I have a pre-93 Browning BPS Game gun -- it has a 5" rifled choke tube.
With Winchester BRI Sabot Slugs it can group 2 - 3 inches at 100 yards.
Their slow starting velocity is not a bug, its a feature -- the recoil is not bad!
(They retain the velocity better than foster style slugs because the are only .500 across.)
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Almost all new deer shotguns now have the fully rifled barrel and most ammo
from Winchester, Remington and Hornady (SST) is designed for fully rifled shotgun barrels.
 
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