I may be off track, figure there may not be much use for that here in Canada other than clay shoots? I do notice the stuff here in 20ga, both Remington field loads and Win target loads. No. 9 is quite effective where one is gunning for Snipe which is a hard target to hit anyway.
Why would you shoot trap or skeet with #9, kinda takes the challenge out of it.
???? Challenge out of it
No.9 for trap is a real disadvantage especially in the cold months
Skeet 12ga or 20 ga makes little difference using 8, 8 1/2 etc etc but try to run 100 with the 410 or even 25 on a regular basis and not use No.9
NOT going to happen
Cheers
Why would you shoot trap or skeet with #9, kinda takes the challenge out of it.
I've always shoot sessions of 25's, but we run #4-6, We bust out #8's for the new guys. What do cold months have to do with it? Never head of this. The only disadvantage I could see with #9's is long shots. If I'm missing something please educate me.
I've always shoot sessions of 25's, but we run #4-6, We bust out #8's for the new guys. What do cold months have to do with it? Never head of this. The only disadvantage I could see with #9's is long shots. If I'm missing something please educate me.
The only disadvantage I could see with #9's is long shots. If I'm missing something please educate me.
I'm no professional skeet shooter. Never competed or shot skeet at a range, just busy clay in the bush with my friends and for the most part we use hand throwers. I have good days were 23-25/25 happen and have days when I can't get 20/25 and we use #4-6 to practice with because when duck season rolls around that's what we shoot.
Thanks for the info guys, appreciated.
Exactly as I suspected. If you have never shot skeet, on an actual skeet field, then you really have no idea just what it takes to run 25 straight, let alone 100 straight.



























