I'm planning on using my Remington 870 with rifled choke tube on a 21" smooth bore barrel for Ontario black bear next year, this thread is helpful. I have a variety of lead slugs to try and more info available is always good. Typically used Remington Sluggers before the straightwall cartridge allowance in Ohio for deer.
I'm never sure what to use in the case of a smoothbore with a rifled slug. I know there is a money difference between buying a choke and a rifled slug barrel, but it may not be what you think.I'm planning on using my Remington 870 with rifled choke tube on a 21" smooth bore barrel for Ontario black bear next year, this thread is helpful. I have a variety of lead slugs to try and more info available is always good. Typically used Remington Sluggers before the straightwall cartridge allowance in Ohio for deer.
I'm never sure what to use in the case of a smoothbore with a rifled slug. I know there is a money difference between buying a choke and a rifled slug barrel, but it may not be what you think.
For less than $200 you can have a rifled barrel. Add a scope and mounts for about $300, and you have a 150 yard killing machine that you can convert back to be used for home defense, duck hunting...etc.
There is a huge difference in accuracy between a rifled barrel with sabot vs smoothbore with rifled slug. Rifled barrel wins nearly every time.
GB R870 12 Bore Rifled Barrel
GB R870 20 Bore Rifled Barrel
GB Leupold VX-Freedom
I'm planning on using my Remington 870 with rifled choke tube on a 21" smooth bore barrel for Ontario black bear next year, this thread is helpful. I have a variety of lead slugs to try and more info available is always good. Typically used Remington Sluggers before the straightwall cartridge allowance in Ohio for deer.
I agree with you with a caveat. Brenneke could have made the ridges on their slugs straight to accomplish tight choke passage, but instead decided to give them a twist to enhance accuracy. In essence, killing two birds with one stone.Rifled shotgun barrels are designed for sabot slugs. The ridges on the Brenneke design have zero to do with accuracy or spin and everything to do with providing expansion space for the lead regardless the choke of the barrel from which it was fired. They were created with the expectation that they would be fired from typically tightly choked German SxS's and drillings. It is why they do not blow the last four inches off the front of the barrel of a full choked gun.
I would never use one in any rifled barrel.
That is simply not true. The slug does not spin. The Brenneke gains accuracy over the more common US Foster slug because the attached extended wad acts as a fin and causes the slug to fly like lawn dart. The molded rifling contributes nothing to that other than allowing safe passage through a choke.I agree with you with a caveat. Brenneke could have made the ridges on their slugs straight to accomplish tight choke passage, but instead decided to give them a twist to enhance accuracy. In essence, killing two birds with one stone.
Rifled slugs spin before leaving the barrel, then the extended wad takes over when it leaves.That is simply not true. The slug does not spin. The Brenneke gains accuracy over the more common US Foster slug because the attached extended wad acts as a fin and causes the slug to fly lawn dart. The molded rifling contributes nothing to that other than allowing safe passage through a choke.
An Official Journal Of The NRA | The Truth About Shotgun Slugs
Everything you wanted to know about shotgun slugs (but were afraid to ask).www.shootingillustrated.com
One quarter turn at whatever range they were firing? But yes, I and even the NRA stand corrected. Apparently the foster developed some spin within that particular barrel.Rifled slugs spin before leaving the barrel, then the extended wad takes over when it leaves.