I find the small bore smoothies aesthetically pleasing and I suppose there's something to be said for economy of shot and powder. I'm more of a paper puncher these days, but if I were a serious hunter, I'd opt for a larger bore.
Several years ago, I acquired a GM .40"X1"X42" SB barrel and all the parts to build a smooth rifle. These barrels aren't made by GM now, but if you could find one it might meet your needs.Do these exist as factory guns? Or would this only be something I can do as a custom thing -- order the rifle I want in .32 and then have it bored out smooth?
Well there you are simple! RudyardDifferent countries have different shot sizes , A British 6 is the same size as an American 7 , an American 6 is the same size as a British 5 etc .
These shot sizes can vary from country to country , why they cant get together and make the number / size the same all over the World I do not know .
I shoot 0.95" or 2.41mm 7½'s for trap , this is also the US 7½ , but it is the English 6½ and the Australian 7 , unless I buy Australian ammo and the 7½ becomes a US 8 an English 7 and a European 8 .
Through a quirk in our game regs, I can hunt turkey with any smoothbore muzzleloader I want & load it however I want. So that has me thinking about a small caliber smoothbore -- something in the .30-.40 range. Do these exist as factory guns? Or would this only be something I can do as a custom thing -- order the rifle I want in .32 and then have it bored out smooth?
That was my plan. See what a .40 SB could do, then if accuracy and utility combined weren't satisfactory for lawn, garden and barn pest or varmint control, have it rifled.The shooter could always have the barrel rifled later if he felt the need.
That was my plan. See what a .40 SB could do, then if accuracy and utility combined weren't satisfactory for lawn, garden and barn pest or varmint control, have it rifled.
I'd think the SB would be as useful as a modern .410 unmentionable shotgun, and considerably more powerful. At close range a 95 grain RB going 2300 fps would take the biggest predators prowling around here.
This thread has sparked my interest in the project again.
some years back l built a smoothbore around a piece of quarry drill shaft. 1/4" bore using single buckshot. Effective on rabbits and squirrels and in smoothbore competitions.
l'll see if l can dig up a picture
Sometimes I load five count .36 balls in my .45 SB to circumnavigate the legal black hole here in the UK. It's a long boring story but this bizarrely is legal whereas a single ball may not be legal....go figure.
View attachment 174102
Anyway it works.View attachment 174103
I've killed barn rats with a well-worn semi auto 22 and old all brass rat shot loads. At 3 to 5 yards some required 2 or 3 quick shots to kill.I would think that a .36 with shot loads would be a pretty short-ranged affair, but I have no experience with something like that.
I all honesty I can not remember.How tight is the grouping of the 5-ball loads at, say, 35 to 40 yards?
Part of the ambiguity is that it often depends how somebody loads it up. Supersonic, it can be great. Subsonic, it can be great. But transonic, it can get all squirrely. When the ball goes transonic, to me, is where rifling really shows its value.What was the effective range?
Smoothbore shooters tend to start getting pretty vague when asked about actual ranges that their gun is really accurate to (with no fliers).
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