Wax slugs make nice round holes in the target at the distance I usually shoot - 20 yards. They cost me a bit less than 30 cents each, so plinking is cheap practice.
I made 75 of them last night while watching the Grey Cup game.
I used Champion Handicap shells. 1 1/8 of shot, 3 dram equiv. Should make a fairly snappy load. I will chony them today. I am guessing around 1200 fps.
I will take them to the range and shoot them for accuracy at 25 and 50 yards. I will use a shotgun with a rear peep sight, to reduce aiming error.
A regular slug group should be a single big hole. For my cheap plinking purposes, a 3" group would suffice. My targets are usually jugs of water.
A wax slug blows apart on contact, so there is no down range risk from a cloud of #8 shot. If I wanted to use one of these on the coyotes that come up to the house (I am on a farm) I toyed with the idea of adding a lead pistol bullet to the slug, to give some penetration. A 200gr 45 cal pistol bullet at 1200 fps would be quite effective.
Then I got to thinking about accuracy. If the bullet was sitting near the top of the slug, would it add to stability? If it was a bit off-centre, would it cause the slug to tumble?
So I made wax slugs with and without an added lead bullet.
I will shoot these at both 25 and 50 yards to test the accuracy potential of both flavours.
I made 75 of them last night while watching the Grey Cup game.
I used Champion Handicap shells. 1 1/8 of shot, 3 dram equiv. Should make a fairly snappy load. I will chony them today. I am guessing around 1200 fps.
I will take them to the range and shoot them for accuracy at 25 and 50 yards. I will use a shotgun with a rear peep sight, to reduce aiming error.
A regular slug group should be a single big hole. For my cheap plinking purposes, a 3" group would suffice. My targets are usually jugs of water.
A wax slug blows apart on contact, so there is no down range risk from a cloud of #8 shot. If I wanted to use one of these on the coyotes that come up to the house (I am on a farm) I toyed with the idea of adding a lead pistol bullet to the slug, to give some penetration. A 200gr 45 cal pistol bullet at 1200 fps would be quite effective.
Then I got to thinking about accuracy. If the bullet was sitting near the top of the slug, would it add to stability? If it was a bit off-centre, would it cause the slug to tumble?
So I made wax slugs with and without an added lead bullet.
I will shoot these at both 25 and 50 yards to test the accuracy potential of both flavours.


















































