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swingit

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Posts posted by swingit

  1. Great thread.

     

    As a relative newbie to reloading I just don't understand why any home loader would not strive to get the best out of your home loads ?. Why would anyone not take the time to work a load out that best suits the gun when you have all the tools to do so at your disposal.....I just don't get it.

     

    The main reason I took up home loading was for accuracy, not cost. ( It is a bonus though) I was so disappointed with my outfit and how it performed with the many factory loads I tried, I could just not find one that I was happy with, I even started to question if my barrel was a bad one, the crown was no good etc! . The best of the bunch was Hornandy and I would really struggle to get these grouping inside a moa @ 100 yards, for the most part I would get one or two bullets outside of this. Since I've started loading my own and playing around with different loads,seating depths etc! I've got my 5 shot groups down to less than 1/2 inch at 100yards and I honestly believe I could shrink this down a little with a bit more playing. I'm so happy that I took the step of reloading my own and I'm really enjoying it.

  2. Hi all

     

    I've just bought a sidewinder 8-32x56 to sit on top of my Tikka 595.222 for a bit of long range crow bashing.....Can any of you nice people recommend a decent set of 30mm mounts to sit them in.I don't want to pay silly money if I can help it.

    Thanks

  3.  

     

    PS. I have yet to see an air gun pellet either .177 or .22 having deformed to any degree unless it has hit solid bone.

     

     

    Agree Hamster and i'm shooting 30ftp.Not that I've ever found many in my quarry (two from what I can remember) it's normally a clean pass through.

  4. Locky is in front of me on the 2nd drive when I moved to the back gun position ( the near miss with the pheasant) and Rob was to his right. On the last drive Rob was three guns to my right and hit a very high fast bird. Apart from that your going to have to take my word and the size of the bag !

    I believe you pal,just having a giggle.Rob is as straight as they come,if he said he shot well,then he did.

     

    Great video and a great day to end your season.

  5. Like Ollie,it's also been my worst year ever.

    It started off well and I was seeing birds in September flighting while walking the dogs but, it went down hill from then until now.There are lots of birds about now and last Saturday a few friends had around 60/70 rises.They are heading back down there Friday but the bas8ards in work wont give me the day off.....Gutted!.I would have liked to seen a bad season out on a high with a nice walk about.

  6. the cartridge loaded with number 4 shot punched a hole through It

    the shot held together = pattern all be it tight from the test gun

    Both I was told earlier in the week couldn't happen due to insufficient energy

    Buy and try a few

     

    All the best

    Of

    Note I prefer the 60 meter version

    Would you agree though that a single No4 shot "would not punch a hole through it" ?.

     

    I may take my .222 on the pheasant tomorrow :rolleyes:

  7. Hi

     

    So have we now decided that there is sufficient energy in number 4 shot to punch a hole through a pallet at 100 yards ?

    Just a note to the utube watchers if you actually try them you will find they work better through a open choke

    Just a thought

    All the best

    Of

    But your statement is flawed though.......

     

    Will a single No4 shot go through a pallet at 100 yards.......NO!

  8. Done a bit of research on these myself when they popped up on the other thread.Totally agree with you Hamster,what a pile of ****.

     

    I'd never heard of them until recently here ( speaks volumes ) I find it difficult to understand how anyone would consider using these shells on feather/pheasant.Lets be honest,if they were any good I'm sure I would have heard about them before and surely some of the countries high bird specialists would have been using them ?.

  9. Who ever says you can't miss in front is talking rubbish, you can also miss to the left, right, underneath and over the top depending on the bird.OP my suggestion go and have a decent lesson at a ground with a selection of drive high towers with an instructor who understands driven game shooting. You owe it to the birds to at least do that.

    You are of course correct in what you say but!

    The gentleman as stated he is a good shot on the clays,this tells me he as no problem getting the line of the target,is gun fits well ect ect.

    I'm not a qualified instructor by any means but the people I have tried to put right over the years on driven pheasants it's nearly always been a lead problem...not enough.

  10. yeah. I watched a good shot and asked him how much lead he was giving them and I was advised to give em a good five bar gate. Also to lead the head and not the body.

    I've heard the five bar gate one many times.

     

    I find it very difficult to explain lead to someone.I have often been asked "Bloody hell how far were you in front of that one,how much lead you give it ?"...The answer is always the same - I'm sorry I cant give you that answer because I don't know.I don't think about it and the minute I do start thinking about it I miss.It's a natural thing.

     

    I'm sure some of you guys know where I'm coming from ?,or is it just me again :rolleyes:

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