modernworrior
CGN Regular
- Location
- Brampton On,
ya i looked all the barrels i found are sold i didn't want to jump and buy before i found more info now you guys have helped. thanks so much.
looking at the remington site if it doesn't say fully rifled , and rem choke or in the case of the express barrel imp cyl it is a smoothbore barrel ?
great ! and the express smoothbore imp cyl is removable/replacable with a rifled rem choke ? not farmiliar with remington barrels and rem chokes . thanks for all the help.
The Express smoothbore slug barrel is fixed improved cylinder. If you want choke tubes in a rifle-sighted smoothbore barrel, the Wingmaster version (#24545) is the one you want. This is what I have on my 870.
Go smoothbore and buy rifled slugs.... the accuracy difference is nominal and teh price of your rounds will be way less..... JMOP
whaaaaat?
a rifled barrel with properly matched sabots will out shoot a smoothbore anyday. anyone making such claims either has very limited experience shooting slug guns or they have a VERY unique smoothbore on their hands.
out of curiousity, what kinda groups are you getting at 100 yards with your smoothbore?
3.5 inch....
No argument that it can be outshot.... but is it really worth the price considering the cost of adding a rifled barrel and the extra cost for the slugs?.... how long are you expecting to go out to when shotgunning?....
considering many rifled combos produce groups half the size you're getting with a smoothbore, your claim of minimal differences in accuracy is just a tad off. i just wanted to speak up before someone new to the sport read your post and assumed a smoothbore is as accurate as a rifled barrel. with a rifled barrel your effective range is pretty much doubled.
as for cost of ammo, the huge increase in accuracy and range is worth it for people that take shots at longer ranges.
considering many rifled combos produce groups half the size you're getting with a smoothbore, your claim of minimal differences in accuracy is just a tad off. i just wanted to speak up before someone new to the sport read your post and assumed a smoothbore is as accurate as a rifled barrel. with a rifled barrel your effective range is pretty much doubled.
as for cost of ammo, the huge increase in accuracy and range is worth it for people that take shots at longer ranges.
Someone decides that a 3.5" group is good enough, while someone else decides that nothing less than .25" will do the job. That's what we call being an adult in a democracy: you get to pay your money and takes your chances.
For me, if I am shooting at more than 100 yards, I don't want a shotgun, I want a rifle. A decent bolt action will put three rounds inside of an inch at that range. A good one will put five. At a whole lot less than $4 per round too.
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The question is how much a sabot slug can do at the same range and how it justifies having to buy the barrle and slugs....
Now, that being said ... if you had the cash in hand and wanted the best... get sabots and dedicated rifled barrel..... but it won't get you any more deer compared to the rifled slugs.... practice is the best option
i'll assume the majority of deer taken in ontario are taken at less than 100 yards and a smooth bore is adequate for most hunters, including me. i was simply referring to the comment about rifled barrels providing a marginal increase in accuracy over a smooth bore, which is totally untrue.
that said, many of us here in southern ontario aren't permitted to use rifles and are limited to shotguns or muzzle loaders.
you can practice as much as you'd like with a smooth bore, but 7" groups at 200 yards is not considered adequate to most hunters and no amount of practice can compensate for a smooth bores lack of accuracy.
you can pickup a used rifled barrel for an 870 for $100. considering how much we spend on tags, gas and other equipment for hunting, $100 is chump changei'm kinda regretting the sale of my 870 rifled barrel which produced 2.5" outside to outside groups at 125 yards.
in regards to cost of ammo, let's compare slugs to turkey loads. rifled slugs are equal to high brass shells ($1-$1.50) while sabot slugs are equal to premium turkey loads ($3-$4). while the cheaper shells can definitely get the job done, the premium loads will almost always outperform them while offering increased effective range.
like most thing's, you get what you pay for![]()
Remington Core-Lokt Ultra 2.75" 12 ga.
Distance(yds) Muzzle 50 100 150 200
Trajectory(in) -1.5 1.8 2.4 0 -6.2
Velocity(fps) 1900 1770 1648 1534 1426
Energy(ftlbs) 3086 2682 2325 2013 1741
There is only 6" of holdover required for a 385 gr sabot from a 2.75" shell at 200 yds. The energy is still 1741 which is plenty. It comes down to the shooter knowing his limitations regarding wind, a good rest, etc. I've seen deer shot at almost 200 yds with a scoped 870 and personally taken 2 at 150+ with a rifled barrel with open sights.
Of course I'd rather use a rifle for deer hunting than sabot slugs but it's the next best thing we can legally use in the season around here. I suggest the OP buy both barrels and be done with it.![]()
It's actually more than 6 inches of drop... the zero point is 150..... it drops 6.2 inches just between 150 and 200 alone....




























