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cliveward

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  1. A very similar situation I found myself in a few seasons ago. I had initially looked at a 20 for the youngsters, after realising that a .410 is more expert territory and as Scully says missing kills enthusiasm. So it was a 20 we were after and while going through the racks in the shop to see what was easiest to handle for a youngster we finally settled on a Lincoln 28 Bore as it was quite a bit lighter than the 20s. After myself and the youngsters had smashed a few clays with it, I then promptly nicked it for game shooting and that's what I've been using the past 3 seasons. My shoots are quite informal. Not massive bags so there is a lot more gun carrying / holding than actual shooting and the lightness of the 28, plus the ability to just stuff 20-30 cartridges in a pocket is quite liberating. It is absolutely more than enough gun for sensible pheasant shooting. I use 24 gram #5 or #5 1/2 for game shooting and 21 gram #6 1/2 for pigeons and clays. For beginners I have a very nice 16 gram #9 load that has almost no recoil. I like the 28 bore so much I bought myself one 'proper' this year, rather than nicking the kids gun. Cheers Clive
  2. Hi Esca, Bit late to the party here, but as others have said John is very knowledgeable on the 28 and has some excellent loads. He'll tell you exactly what you need to put in the cartridges. A good tip for the mec is to replace the crimp starter with the Gaep one from him. It's called the "Start crimp (incisore) tool for new cases". With some adjustment you can then get a crimp that is very near factory quality. You can get it exactly factory quality using a rotating finisher in a drill press. My main load is a 21 gram which can be tailored via shot size for clays #7, pigeons #6.5 or game at sensible distances #6 or #5.5. For that I have just machined the charge bar and inserts on the mec to throw exactly what I want. I have another load at 16 grams of #9 for the kids to use on clays and a 24 gram #5 or #5.5 for more demanding game shooting. I do these on the universal charge bar. It needn't get complicated. I do all these loads with 2 powders, 2 different thickness over powder fibre wads and one size main fibre wad. You don't need massive loads in the 28. We were decoying at the weekend and 24 gram Eley VIP #6 were not killing as well as my loaded 21 gram #6.5 in the same barrel of the same gun. Cheers Clive
  3. Hi All, The Svord mini peasant gets my vote. No money at all. Will easily sharpen shaving sharp. Legal for everyday carry and can be opened one handed and no chance of it closing on your fingers unless you are very cack handed. It's the best every day knife I have found having tried quite a few others. Cheers Clive
  4. Hi All, On the crimping side of things and indeed pistol primer use with the .22 Hornet... It is the theory that the thin case gives inconsistent or low neck tension, so when the primer is detonated it can dislodge the bullet by a variable amount before the main propellant charge burns. A small pistol primer has less dislodging force and a crimp helps to even up the forces involved where it is a problem on some loads. My V-Max load doesn't need crimping, but my H&N round nose load does and crimping has greatly improved accuracy and consistency in that load. Cheers Clive
  5. No need to replace the whole thing R6demon. Just stick a replacement T20 Ruby pill in it. It will be more than you need on a HMR. I use one on a .223. Clear target definition at 10x out to 350-400 yards and easily see the backstop out to 600 with a digital add on. Cheers Clive
  6. I would get the fit checked and for both clay and game, opt for some lighter loads, possibly slightly tighter choked to compensate. A light, tighter choked gun can take a little while to 'learn', but it is a pleasure when you get there with it. I've been using a 28 bore for the past 2 years on game and clays and never feel under gunned. Cheers Clive
  7. Yes I should have made it a bit clearer that I wasn't advocating just...'having a punt'. Either use published load data (wad type makes a difference to pressures) or make your best guess and make a few cartridges and send them up for proof testing. Then you will know exactly and still have all your fingers for pattern testing with proofed loads. Cheers Clive
  8. I'm sure it would be possible to work from a 24 gram load and increase the payload to 28 and reduce the propellant and wad length accordingly. Folkestone Engineering do a wide range of fibre wad lengths and may even have load data for it. My favourite home loads are: 24 Gram #5 1/2 for the more open driven shoots. 21 Gram #6 1/2 for woodland driven shoots and pigeons, squirrels, etc. 16 Gram #9 for clays. Cheers Clive
  9. Rich, I looked at both 20 and 28 for my lad who's 10 and it was the lightest gun that won in the shop. That was a Lincoln 28B. Your lad being a bit older would probably be fine for a 20 with youth proportions. The recoil you can sort out with cartridge choice. My lad and his older cousin can comfortably get through 100 16 gram #9 cartridges in the 28 between them without being bashed about at all. I would guess that a heavier gun in 20 with 21 Gram cartridges would be just as comfortable. You can always sort out fit with slip on recoil pads and cheek risers. If you're at all worried the 20 will be too much of a jump, then go for the 28. Cheers Clive
  10. Hi Reggie, What I would try would be to get a factory unfired 70mm cartridge and then slacken off your final crimp depth screw. Then put the cartridge into the final crimp, close the press ad then adjust the screw down until it bottoms out on the top of the cartridge. Then hold the cartridge up to the light and if you are lucky you should be able to see where the shot finishes. Mark the side of the cartridge and use that as your reference for the stack height when doing your reloads. If you cant see exactly where it is, then you can open up the end of the cartridge and measure it directly. Then you will know your stack height and crimp depth. After that all you need to adjust is the start crimp amount, and then final crimp cam which is detailed in the manual. Either side of correct is hole in the centre or swirled crimp. Cheers Clive
  11. Hi Reggie, Stack height or column height is the height of the overall components in the load. For instance in my 28 bore 70mm loads it's 60-61mm overall height. Adjust it by changing powder, shot and wad combinations. Cheers Clive
  12. Yep, about 20 minutes down the road which is handy. John's primed cases are £81 per thousand and delivery is £10.50 up to 20KG so you might be able to get some wads in there as well. Powder and shot is probably more sensible to get locally. I also use C&G because they do a 3mm over powder wad which works in my 24 gram load. Cheers Clive
  13. Hi Reggie, That's better! Adjusting the crimp depth a bit lower (not the cam) might neaten them up a bit more, but you might need to then adjust your column height if the sides of the cases start to buckle. The 'faceting' on new cases was completely cured by using the Gaep crimp start on my 28 bore. 70mm is 2 3/4" so the column bolt shouldn't need changing. It might be that your 67 and 70mm cases are different construction. Put the same load of powder, wad and shot in one of each. Don't crimp it and then measure the stack height. If the 70mm is higher then you can experiment with adjusting the stack height and or crimp depth settings. Cheers Clive
  14. I'm quite lucky that all the components I need are just down the road if I'm running low and to hand I have an ever shrinking sack full of brand new primed cases, 2 types of power, two or three standard types of fibre wad and a selection of shot to make whatever I fancy for the 28 really. The 16 gram load is very good for clays. i use it a lot myself rather than keep swapping cartridges depending on who's shooting. Cheers Clive
  15. I'm no expert at this. Just a fussy ***. Yesterday I adjusted my 21 and a bit gram #7 load to be a 22 gram load to get the stack height just perfect so the crimps were totally flat, where before if the shot throw was a little light they would be slightly concave which bothered me. Been doing the same again this afternoon adjusting a 24 gram #6.5 load to get the stack heigh perfect to suit the crimp. The sensible way would be to adjust the settings on the crimp but it's pretty much perfect now and I don't want to be messing about adjusting it from load to load. I'd rather just fill it up with the right powder and shot, set the charge bar and away we go. Cheers Clive
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