Ok. Stupid question time. Bear with me...
I know THAT shotgun chokes work, but I’m fuzzy on WHY shotgun chokes work.
Hear me out:
Let’s say you set up a little gun range in a complete atmospheric vacuum. You fire a cylinder bore shotgun at a target. The pattern spread would just be a single hole in the target as though the shot were a slug. This of course is due to Newton’s first law “An object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an outside force.” The shot cup and shot are all travelling the excact same direction down the barrel, and leave the uniformly shaped barrel at the muzzle and carry on towards the target without opening up or discarding the shot cup, because there’s no air to force its way into the shot and push everything apart.
Now imagine you take another shot in this vacuum chamber with a full choked shotgun. The shot and cup travel down the barrel as they did in the first scenario, but as they leave the barrel, they hit the choke, causing the shot and cup to compress. This would act as the “outside force” Newton mentioned. This impact with the choke would jostle the shot around and against each other, causing it to depart from the straight, linear path it had been on, and instead causing an erratic flight path resulting in a slightly wider pattern (or at least a larger hole) in the target.
Now if we let the air back into our chamber and try these shots again, allowing the dense air to open the shot cups and spread out the pellets, why is the full choke printing a tighter pattern? Why doesn’t it deflect and disrupt the shot just a tiny bit more than the cylinder bore like it did in the vacuum? I can make sense of it if there was some big device several feet after[\b] it left the barrel that redirected the already expanding shot cloud into a more linear path... but the full choke isn’t doing that. It’s just deflecting the the filled shot cup that was already sliding happily along in a nice linear path.
So what gives? Anybody got a 25 yard long vacuum chamber I can go play in?
I know THAT shotgun chokes work, but I’m fuzzy on WHY shotgun chokes work.
Hear me out:
Let’s say you set up a little gun range in a complete atmospheric vacuum. You fire a cylinder bore shotgun at a target. The pattern spread would just be a single hole in the target as though the shot were a slug. This of course is due to Newton’s first law “An object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an outside force.” The shot cup and shot are all travelling the excact same direction down the barrel, and leave the uniformly shaped barrel at the muzzle and carry on towards the target without opening up or discarding the shot cup, because there’s no air to force its way into the shot and push everything apart.
Now imagine you take another shot in this vacuum chamber with a full choked shotgun. The shot and cup travel down the barrel as they did in the first scenario, but as they leave the barrel, they hit the choke, causing the shot and cup to compress. This would act as the “outside force” Newton mentioned. This impact with the choke would jostle the shot around and against each other, causing it to depart from the straight, linear path it had been on, and instead causing an erratic flight path resulting in a slightly wider pattern (or at least a larger hole) in the target.
Now if we let the air back into our chamber and try these shots again, allowing the dense air to open the shot cups and spread out the pellets, why is the full choke printing a tighter pattern? Why doesn’t it deflect and disrupt the shot just a tiny bit more than the cylinder bore like it did in the vacuum? I can make sense of it if there was some big device several feet after[\b] it left the barrel that redirected the already expanding shot cloud into a more linear path... but the full choke isn’t doing that. It’s just deflecting the the filled shot cup that was already sliding happily along in a nice linear path.
So what gives? Anybody got a 25 yard long vacuum chamber I can go play in?


















































