Which Shotgun for buckshot ?

I will be changing to using buckshot for deer hunting is there any shotgun you have experienced that gives you the best patterns. What choke works best for you?
Can you tell any difference in barrel length?
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better?
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun?
I know these are questions that are opinions but I would like to here from someone with real experience
I grew up shooting buck shot at deer in front of hounds.. I am currently using a Benelli SBE with a buck kicker choke tube. Shooting Winchester XX 3inch OO buck, It shoots a crazy tight pattern and I will not post how far I can kill a deer with it. It would be considered unethical here by most.
I will say like most things don't make it more complicated than it needs be.
I have shot and still use a smooth bore slug barrel (no choke) with 3inch OOO if I expect 30 yard or closer fast shots. Backed up with one oz slugs.
I prefer big buck shot oo or ooo some folks like #1 or #4. I do not feel the smaller shot penetrates as well.
That being said I have a friend that shot a 20ga this year with I think #2 TSS and was flat out smoking deer a long ways out. for a shot gun.
A rem870 with a Kicks buck kicker choke is all you need. I have shot probably 50 deer with a 870 wing master, 30 inch full barrel and Winchester xx OO 2 3/4 shells, so you don't need 3.5 Check the velocity. The 3.5 has more pellets but a lot of the loads are moving slower = less penetration.
Federal flight control buck shot does well .
As with any thing with a shotgun, you can have to tight of a pattern, Match your distance with the pattern, My SBE with the kicks buck kicker is very tight. at 30 yards or less I either flatten them or miss clean.
Grab your gun factory choke, some 3 inch double OO and pattern it at 30-40 yards. A shot gun is not a precision instrument and unfortunately often you will need a follow up shot .
Now all that being said, I prefer my rifle but rifles are not legal where I live, and dog hunting for deer is a old old tradition.
 
I will be changing to using buckshot for deer hunting is there any shotgun you have experienced that gives you the best patterns. What choke works best for you? KICKS brans choke, the buck kicker model. https://www.kicks-ind.com/pages/buck-kicker-buckshot-choke-tubes
Can you tell any difference in barrel length? Not really,
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better? YES
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun? Maybe, Pattern and check the velocity of the loads, some of the shoter shells are actually faster, Faster = better penetration,
I know these are questions that are opinions but I would like to here from someone with real experience
 
I grew up shooting buck shot at deer in front of hounds.. I am currently using a Benelli SBE with a buck kicker choke tube. Shooting Winchester XX 3inch OO buck, It shoots a crazy tight pattern and I will not post how far I can kill a deer with it. It would be considered unethical here by most.
I will say like most things don't make it more complicated than it needs be.
I have shot and still use a smooth bore slug barrel (no choke) with 3inch OOO if I expect 30 yard or closer fast shots. Backed up with one oz slugs.
I prefer big buck shot oo or ooo some folks like #1 or #4. I do not feel the smaller shot penetrates as well.
That being said I have a friend that shot a 20ga this year with I think #2 TSS and was flat out smoking deer a long ways out. for a shot gun.
A rem870 with a Kicks buck kicker choke is all you need. I have shot probably 50 deer with a 870 wing master, 30 inch full barrel and Winchester xx OO 2 3/4 shells, so you don't need 3.5 Check the velocity. The 3.5 has more pellets but a lot of the loads are moving slower = less penetration.
Federal flight control buck shot does well .
As with any thing with a shotgun, you can have to tight of a pattern, Match your distance with the pattern, My SBE with the kicks buck kicker is very tight. at 30 yards or less I either flatten them or miss clean.
Grab your gun factory choke, some 3 inch double OO and pattern it at 30-40 yards. A shot gun is not a precision instrument and unfortunately often you will need a follow up shot .
Now all that being said, I prefer my rifle but rifles are not legal where I live, and dog hunting for deer is an old old tradition.
62flint - agree “don’t over think it”….it’s not called a “scatter gun” for nothing
 
I grew up shooting buck shot at deer in front of hounds.. I am currently using a Benelli SBE with a buck kicker choke tube. Shooting Winchester XX 3inch OO buck, It shoots a crazy tight pattern and I will not post how far I can kill a deer with it. It would be considered unethical here by most.
I will say like most things don't make it more complicated than it needs be.
I have shot and still use a smooth bore slug barrel (no choke) with 3inch OOO if I expect 30 yard or closer fast shots. Backed up with one oz slugs.
I prefer big buck shot oo or ooo some folks like #1 or #4. I do not feel the smaller shot penetrates as well.
That being said I have a friend that shot a 20ga this year with I think #2 TSS and was flat out smoking deer a long ways out. for a shot gun.
A rem870 with a Kicks buck kicker choke is all you need. I have shot probably 50 deer with a 870 wing master, 30 inch full barrel and Winchester xx OO 2 3/4 shells, so you don't need 3.5 Check the velocity. The 3.5 has more pellets but a lot of the loads are moving slower = less penetration.
Federal flight control buck shot does well .
As with any thing with a shotgun, you can have to tight of a pattern, Match your distance with the pattern, My SBE with the kicks buck kicker is very tight. at 30 yards or less I either flatten them or miss clean.
Grab your gun factory choke, some 3 inch double OO and pattern it at 30-40 yards. A shot gun is not a precision instrument and unfortunately often you will need a follow up shot .
Now all that being said, I prefer my rifle but rifles are not legal where I live, and dog hunting for deer is a old old tradition.
If you had an O/U with 3.5" chambers, you would have a choice of taking a close shot using 00-BUCK with a IM or FULL choke and the other barrel could be a rifled slug with a CYL choke. Flip the switch for close or (relatively) long range.

@Mekaniks has one such shotgun. ;)
 
If you had an O/U with 3.5" chambers, you would have a choice of taking a close shot using 00-BUCK with a IM or FULL choke and the other barrel could be a rifled slug with a CYL choke. Flip the switch for close or (relatively) long range.

@Mekaniks has one such shotgun. ;)
I wouldn't want to shoot that thing,,,,,,
 
If you had an O/U with 3.5" chambers, you would have a choice of taking a close shot using 00-BUCK with a IM or FULL choke and the other barrel could be a rifled slug with a CYL choke. Flip the switch for close or (relatively) long range.

@Mekaniks has one such shotgun. ;)
Yes Sir! Boy do I!!

I purchased a Browning Synergy "wicked wing series" from @BeeMaa that is quickly becoming my "go to" shotgun. It took me a bit to get it dialed in with length of pull adjusted, comb height.... I Installed sling studs for a waterfowl sling, picked up and patterned some Carlson mid range, long range, and turkey extended choke tubes....
I finally got it out for its maiden field test in Texas a couple weeks ago with a couple teal and sandhill and couldn't be happier. I am looking forward to using it for spring turkey, then taking it to Alaska for sandhill and geese this fall.
If I can get out to Kodiak for some high volume sea ducks in the salt water this fall that will be final test.... More to come :D Beers:
 
If I may make a suggestion, I used a Super Black Eagle or Supernova with 3.5 00 buckshot (18 pellet) and killed quite a few deer. I found aiming for the neck/head made the biggest difference, rarely did I need a second shot, there was also very limited tracking.
It's a good start, but at what distance are you focusing on? With which brand of shell?
I’d like to see a 40 or 50 yard pattern board with that shotgun/load/choke combination.
I'm curious too. I wonder if that XX 3½ 15 pellet load can be tamed at distance too.
I grew up shooting buck shot at deer in front of hounds.. I am currently using a Benelli SBE with a buck kicker choke tube. Shooting Winchester XX 3inch OO buck, It shoots a crazy tight pattern and I will not post how far I can kill a deer with it. It would be considered unethical here by most.
A solid combination that is well proven by several I know. I have heard talk of shots over 100 yards and believe it feasible.
I will say like most things don't make it more complicated than it needs be.
I have shot and still use a smooth bore slug barrel (no choke) with 3inch OOO if I expect 30 yard or closer fast shots. Backed up with one oz slugs.
I prefer big buck shot oo or ooo some folks like #1 or #4. I do not feel the smaller shot penetrates as well.
At extended range you are spot on. Unless turkey is in season the number buckshot is in the truck.
That being said I have a friend that shot a 20ga this year with I think #2 TSS and was flat out smoking deer a long ways out. for a shot gun.
Interesting indeed. I'd be interested to hear the yardage on that for reference sake. The 20 gauge has a natural tight pattern and the increased density shot might just offset the shot size.
A rem870 with a Kicks buck kicker choke is all you need. I have shot probably 50 deer with a 870 wing master, 30 inch full barrel and Winchester xx OO 2 3/4 shells, so you don't need 3.5 Check the velocity. The 3.5 has more pellets but a lot of the loads are moving slower = less penetration.
Another solid combination for sure. I have found that the 3½ has more of a slap to it at longer ranges than the 2¾, but still carries the penetration sufficient to reach the organs through the ribs in 00B. I never shot the 1B when it was offered and have not used the 4B in 3½.
Federal flight control buck shot does well .
As with any thing with a shotgun, you can have to tight of a pattern, Match your distance with the pattern, My SBE with the kicks buck kicker is very tight. at 30 yards or less I either flatten them or miss clean.
Flite control is almost slug like up close. Easy to miss clean. Which buck kicker do you use for it?
Grab your gun factory choke, some 3 inch double OO and pattern it at 30-40 yards. A shot gun is not a precision instrument and unfortunately often you will need a follow up shot .
I was always taught to shoot and close the distance and shoot again. Repeat until you can put your hand on the deer. It is an athletic way to hunt given the short range and the need to be in the best position to intercept the chase.
If you had an O/U with 3.5" chambers, you would have a choice of taking a close shot using 00-BUCK with a IM or FULL choke and the other barrel could be a rifled slug with a CYL choke. Flip the switch for close or (relatively) long range.

@Mekaniks has one such shotgun. ;)
I have considered this heavily for solo hunting covering a lot of ground with one gun.
Or you could get that triple barrel. I haven't used an O/U to hunt deer, but the double barrel SxS appeared to have a strange disadvantage in that I believe the deer saw the muzzles on several occasions at close range and it spooked them. I was not silhouetted or UV illuminated but I did have the bores pointed right at the deer. The theory of not looking directly into the eyes of a stalked animal may well apply to not pointing the double gun directly at the game until you intend to shoot.
 
I have considered this heavily for solo hunting covering a lot of ground with one gun.
Or you could get that triple barrel. I haven't used an O/U to hunt deer, but the double barrel SxS appeared to have a strange disadvantage in that I believe the deer saw the muzzles on several occasions at close range and it spooked them. I was not silhouetted or UV illuminated but I did have the bores pointed right at the deer. The theory of not looking directly into the eyes of a stalked animal may well apply to not pointing the double gun directly at the game until you intend to shoot.
Maybe the deer caught a glint of the end of the barrels?

The shotgun I sold to @Mekaniks is a Browning Cynergy Wicked Wing O/U with a full camo treatment to help prevent any light from reflecting. Using chokes that have a dull finish would help as well.

I know I’ve seen some stock chokes that were fully chromed, which makes no sense on a hunting shotgun. Can’t remember what the Cynergy came with.
 
Maybe the deer caught a glint of the end of the barrels?

The shotgun I sold to @Mekaniks is a Browning Cynergy Wicked Wing O/U with a full camo treatment to help prevent any light from reflecting. Using chokes that have a dull finish would help as well.

I know I’ve seen some stock chokes that were fully chromed, which makes no sense on a hunting shotgun. Can’t remember what the Cynergy came with.
Yeah the Cynergy came with the chrome extended tubes that resemble a bird band. I replaced them with black Carlsons....
I never thought about the barrels of a side by side looking like a set of eye balls (two black holes next to each other).....
 
Yeah the Cynergy came with the chrome extended tubes that resemble a bird band. I replaced them with black Carlsons....
I never thought about the barrels of a side by side looking like a set of eye balls (two black holes next to each other).....
I thought it was the Cynergy that had the chrome chokes. Appreciate the verification.

I suppose the SxS looking like a set of eyes is completely possible. Yet another reason for having an O/U. :A Stirring: :ROFLMAO:
 
Maybe the deer caught a glint of the end of the barrels?

The shotgun I sold to @Mekaniks is a Browning Cynergy Wicked Wing O/U with a full camo treatment to help prevent any light from reflecting. Using chokes that have a dull finish would help as well.

I know I’ve seen some stock chokes that were fully chromed, which makes no sense on a hunting shotgun. Can’t remember what the Cynergy came with.
The gun in question was a mighty Stevens 311. It was not overly shiny and I was always fairly concealed. I feel like it was the orientation of the barrels like eyes. The prey just didn't like it and always found me. Several different occasions they just looked right at me and I wasn't looking at them but the gun was trained. Eventually I learned to do the low ready presentation where the muzzles were down and I didn't experience the same visibility to game getting picked out. The discussion is making me want to try brown paper over the muzzles and taking the O/U out to see if I have different results.
 
I will be changing to using buckshot for deer hunting is there any shotgun you have experienced that gives you the best patterns. What choke works best for you?
Can you tell any difference in barrel length?
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better?
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun?
I know these are questions that are opinions but I would like to here from someone with real experience
 
I will be changing to using buckshot for deer hunting is there any shotgun you have experienced that gives you the best patterns. What choke works best for you?
Can you tell any difference in barrel length?
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better?
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun?
I know these are questions that are opinions but I would like to here from someone with real experience
Did you wake up thinking you wanted to hit a hornets nest with a 2x4 or did you do it by accident?

If I were looking for a dedicated deer shotgun, I'd get a Savage 220 bolt action 20 gauge and put a scope on it and shoot Federal Trophy Copper Sabot Slugs. My friend has this exact setup and is punching cloverleafs at 150 yards with a Leupold 1.5-5x20 scope. This is a relatively short and light package that's easy to use in a blind or treestand.

If slugs are not an option and using buckshot is mandatory...the Beretta A400 and Benelli SBE3 I have extensive experience with and both pattern very well with what I have tested. Very slight edge to the Beretta A400 with pattern testing, however I've not tested buckshot out of either one.

My best patterns have come with non-ported chokes from Müller and Carlson's. That said the combination you come up with will depend on the combination of your shotgun the load you use and the choke. It could take some time to sort things out. @Forrest Halley has also done extensive testing in this area and is another great source of information.

What I do know about chokes is that almost every factory choke (even Beretta & Benelli) have been incredibly inconsistent when it comes to the actual diameter measurement vs what it's supposed to be. Every Müller & Carlson's choke I have are within 0.001 of what they are supposed to be. BTW - I must have about 25 of these chokes and several other brands as well. None have been as consistent as these two brands.

Barrel length? Get what you like. I hear all kinds of talk about what's better for this or that...I haven't seen any concrete data supporting it. Keep it 26" if you want it shorter for working inside a blind. Longer 28" and 30" will give you a little more speed on your shot, but it's not that much. It would make more difference if you were wing shooting because of the weight added with the extra inches and how you swing the shotgun.

Personally, I like my SBE3 with a 28" barrel for turkey, goose and clays. If I were going deer hunting with buckshot, I'd probably use the same shotgun. It just works for me.

As for the 3" vs 3.5" - I like the 3.5" chamber because I like BIG turkey loads. I've also shot a bunch of 3.5" goose shells and still have some. It's good to have the option. The downside would be speed of the action, and it's nothing that most shooters will ever notice. It makes a difference if you are a competitive or professional trick shooter. In the hunting fields you will never notice the difference.

If you want to talk more in depth about this, feel free to send me a PM and we can text or call. You really asked a bunch of questions. LOL.
 
I will be changing to using buckshot for deer hunting is there any shotgun you have experienced that gives you the best patterns. What choke works best for you?
Can you tell any difference in barrel length?
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better?
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun?
I know these are questions that are opinions but I would like to here from someone with real experience
I have hunted deer with shotguns and hounds for the past 35 years. I have been a gun nerd my whole life so I was always curious what shotgun and load were being used and why that particular person chose the load. I was curious as to what was being used with and without success. My experience has shown that certain combinations work better than others, but please recognize this is real world experience and not range testing where every possible option was exercised in all cases.

Please send me a DM and we can discuss this at length and get a handle on exactly what you're looking to accomplish. My reply would better tailored.
 
What choke works best for you?
I start at factory full and move into tighter chokes as the pattern tightens down for my needs. There are things that I consider as well such as overall length, maximum range, and what's in season. I don't like an extended choke for my short shotguns as it works against the utility. The maximum range of the stand I am on if I'm standing in a driver to the choke I'd select. If I'm walking solo or man driving I prefer the long reach and I eat it when I'm in the thicket. If I'm a stander or still hunting I will tailor to the stand from flush full to the extended extra full chokes.
What's in season matters as well. If Turkeys are in I am likely leading off with 1B or 4B so I may choke to optimize the first shot. I don't like heavy buckshot for flying targets and prefer a fuller pattern that is optimized for about fifty yards or less because a Turkey is just so incredibly resilient. I won't shoot at one moving further than that for fear of wounding it and the lost bird.
Can you tell any difference in barrel length?
Yes. I can tell the difference in both maneuverability and pointability. These two qualities I often find to be at odds with each other. I like a shotgun to have sights if it is a shorter barrel (<26") due to having some clean misses at close range with ultra tight patterns. The longer barrels are at home in open hardwoods and fields where I value maximum velocity and range, but they are a pain if you have to go into laps, short pines, honeysuckle, or briars. The short barrels give up the velocity and don't swing as smoothly on running deer, but the sights can make for a more precise hold if a long shot comes up.
Is the aftermarket cokes that much better?
I feel if you are looking to extend your range the aftermarket choke tubes are really that much better. Not all are created equal and there is a boatload of BS out there marketing to hunters. I feel that Bubba Roundtree Outdoors has good fair tests on buckshot chokes because he is a reloader of buckshot shells. I currently use Patternmaster or Buck Kicker with my Remingtons. I use a Trulock or Carlson's with my Benelli SBE1. I have a Patternmaster for the Mossberg 835s, but I haven't tested it enough to know which barrel I want it on yet(20", 24", or 28"). A note about the Pattermaster/Wadwizard: if all the information about shot string length and shot cups is to be believed, then the changing of shells can greatly tighten or expand the pattern especially by taking the shot cup out of the equation. I have experienced some very tight patterns at close range that were rifle-like in the Remington. So much so that I moved it to a dedicated barrel with sights and zeroed the elevation for 80 yards.
I will be using a 12 gauge
Would it be worth going to a 3.5" gun?
Hmm. This is a good question. It will depend on the patterns you are able to achieve with your combinations at the range you find the most useful for your hunting. I have killed deer at long range with the 3½" shell and decisively so. It comes down to are more pellets better for your pattern or worse. There is also a capacity loss for your gun using a 3½" shell in anything but the chamber. I didn't mind when it was a maximum of three shells in the gun for all hunting in my state. Now that this is no longer the case, more shells in the gun equates to less in the pocket especially if you have a carrier on the stock. There is value to grab and go and being able to stay on the stand with multiple shot opportunities without needing to resupply. The longer distance away you open up on a deer, the more shots it will likely take to finish the job. As long as you are shooting 00B I don't think you'll notice the velocity loss from the heavier shells. With 4B you're going to have to watch out because the energy loss is a real issue at 80+ yards. Despite whatever YouTube coyote hunters say I have dug 4B out of the hide on the front side on deer and 1B out of the far side ribs and hide on 80-100 yard shots from 2¾" shells. I feel like the 3"& 3½" 4B should be used only when Turkeys are in season and expected shots are closer.
If slugs are not an option and using buckshot is mandatory...the Beretta A400 and Benelli SBE3 I have extensive experience with and both pattern very well with what I have tested. Very slight edge to the Beretta A400 with pattern testing, however I've not tested buckshot out of either one.
If I were buying a gun to hunt deer, it would be a 3½" Benelli or Beretta with as short a barrel as I could get because I think the tight 12gauge barrels throw the best patterns and these companies give you a lot of choke tubes with the gun.
@BeeMaa said:
My best patterns have come with non-ported chokes from Müller and Carlson's. That said the combination you come up with will depend on the combination of your shotgun the load you use and the choke. It could take some time to sort things out.
I have no experience with Müller, but will second the Carlson's recommendation. I haven't noted anything wonderful about ported chokes other than it dirties up my magazine extension. I never thought to test them against unported siblings until I watched the video stating it does make a larger pattern. What I do know about chokes is that almost every factory choke (even Beretta & Benelli) have been incredibly inconsistent when it comes to the actual diameter measurement vs what it's supposed to be. Every Müller & Carlson's choke I have are within 0.001 of what they are supposed to be. BTW - I must have about 25 of these chokes and several other brands as well. None have been as consistent as these two brands. I have a Trulock for my SBE1 and I like it just fine so far. I would like to do a head to head with the Carlson's Coyote Choke and see which comes out on top with 00B

Barrel length? Get what you like. I hear all kinds of talk about what's better for this or that...I haven't seen any concrete data supporting it. Keep it 26" if you want it shorter for working inside a blind. Longer 28" and 30" will give you a little more speed on your shot, but it's not that much. It would make more difference if you were wing shooting because of the weight added with the extra inches and how you swing the shotgun.

Personally, I like my SBE3 with a 28" barrel for turkey, goose and clays. If I were going deer hunting with buckshot, I'd probably use the same shotgun. It just works for me.
I like my options. I lugged a 28" 835 around for a while without issues and stacked deer. I liked it for wing shooting also. Eventually I found Mossbergs less attractive for their pointability. I put sights on them because they aren't the same like Remington and Benelli where I hold under. My best swinging gun is the Benelli SBE1 26" with the Nordic Components magazine extension. That said my deep woods deer gun is a 20" 835 with low profile fiberoptic sights and a flush fit full choke. I feel like I could shoulder it in a phone booth, but knowing that they make an 18½" now has me foolishly wondering if it can be improved upon.
As for the 3" vs 3.5" - I like the 3.5" chamber because I like BIG turkey loads. <snip>. It's good to have the option. <Snip> In the hunting fields you will never notice the difference.
I too enjoy the option. I'm never out of the game due to shell length. The pump shooters will notice the longer action, but not in the moment. The semi shooters have to be pretty fast to out shoot the big gun's splits. Not many people can run under 0.15 seconds while managing 12 gauge recoil.
 
Pattern testing this morning with the SBE3, Federal Black Cloud TSS BB/7 and Carlson’s Federal Black Cloud Long Range Choke. I went 3 for 3 on crossing shots from 40+ yards. All fell stone dead from the sky.

IMG_1142.jpeg
 
Pattern testing this morning with the SBE3, Federal Black Cloud TSS BB/7 and Carlson’s Federal Black Cloud Long Range Choke. I went 3 for 3 on crossing shots from 40+ yards. All fell stone dead from the sky.

View attachment 584862
Do you have a spreadsheet on your choke internal diameters? I have one somewhere for the mobil chokes.
 
Also check out Blue Collar Outdoors on YouTube. They do tons of pattern testing with turkey/ waterfowl ammo and tons of chokes. Its pretty good info.

Cheers

503
 
I am coming to the conclusion after a day spent watching buckshot and buckshot choke testing videos that there a few problems repeating themselves with regularity: sponsor bias, shallow depth of testing, and outright silly ball dropping during testing.

The sponsor bias is evident where you have a channel sponsored by a particular product and the range never actually gets stretched out there to where you think it should be so the featured product is highlighted well. I really don't feel like I'm learning anything special about an aftermarket choke or a shotshell until we get beyond fifty yards. I like the guys shooting at 75- 80 yards. That is showing us something useful about a choke and load combination.

Shallow depth of testing is also a problem. The testing shot just two different shells and then concluded. It has merit for that person based on their supply chain, but it really doesn't cover enough bases to be very useful to other people. Big Fella Outdoors had just such a video where he shot just two different shells through the gun and called it good. I found it great because it was an honest test and provided a result that was useful. Some of these other folks are not getting effective results, but they either didn't lay out enough money at the outset to arrange for indepth testing or rushed through the testing without any verification of their results.

The ball drops are the worst. It's a repeat track of "What might have been." Testing buckshot at 100 yards out of a cylinder bore was a waste of time. To his credit he had sight on the gun, but it was a fruitless pursuit. The other annoyingly worthless video was the modified choke tube test from 10-100 yards. It was as though he wasn't even trying to give himself a chance to get to 50 yards much less 100.

I have reached out to a few friends and gotten some excitement generated about testing the various shotguns we have with multiple chokes, barrel lengths, and buckshots. The primary goal is to perform an exhaustive test with the most optimal configurations identified for each gun. Once this has been accomplished the follow-on goal is to stretch the range out to the point where each combination is run out to its own maximum effective range before a winner is crowned. Multiple patterns fired at each range for documentation of consistency and objective transparency. Who knows how indepth we'll be able to get as we're an unsponsored bunch, but we'll have fun and get much better with our shotguns for sure.
 
If you had an O/U with 3.5" chambers, you would have a choice of taking a close shot using 00-BUCK with a IM or FULL choke and the other barrel could be a rifled slug with a CYL choke. Flip the switch for close or (relatively) long range.

@Mekaniks has one such shotgun. ;)
Browning made a series of 425 OUs with 3.5" chambers. I missed out on one and keeping an eye out on the 2nd hand market.

Scrummy
 

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