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Using clay loads for pigeons...didn't go well


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I can perhaps see where you might blame a small shot size for wounding , but for missing ?? , surely that is down to your ability to put it in the right place.

 

I have shot many 1000s of pigeon with 7 1/2 s and just as many with 6s and I really cannot tell any difference in the amount that get wounded , if you put those clay loads in the right place at a sensible range then they will do the job fine.

:good: BB

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I've read a lot of the 6 vs 7.5 debates on here over the past few years, and as I'd never really shot pigeon in numbers, I couldn't comment. However I recently bagged some permission, and have had some good days over the past few months. Naturally, I tried a few loads and here's my opinion...

 

When decoying at 'short - medium' range I can honestly say I noticed no difference in kills (or meat damage) between 6s and 7.5s. HOWEVER, I remember shooting one 'rangier' pigeon with a 28g 7.5 that carried on some 100 yards before dropping the other side of a hedge. It took me and the dog 15minutes of searching before he brought it to hand, and it was still alive when he did. Whilst I'd probably only winged it, I couldn't help but wonder if it would have died had I been using a no.6.

 

That was enough to make my mind up and I've firmly settled on 6's now. Fibre wad every time too, as the cost difference is negligible IMO. I think the only reason people choose to use clay loads is cost. There are now several 'budget' pigeon loads on the market that do a fine job, the last lot I bought where £43 a slab in fibre (although the prices have since gone up).

 

For me, I'd rather pay a little more for cartridges and remove any doubt that I could injure a bird with a 7.5, that would possibly have been killed had I used a no.6. Based on an average days shooting, I bet your not even looking at an extra fiver!

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Guest cookoff013

the last time this topic came up, one fact came up, sometimes economy shells labelled 7.5 can have any shotsize in there, 8s and 9s. its a lie, just like the fact shells rarely get the quoted speeds.

 

makes you htink.

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I've read a lot of the 6 vs 7.5 debates on here over the past few years, and as I'd never really shot pigeon in numbers, I couldn't comment. However I recently bagged some permission, and have had some good days over the past few months. Naturally, I tried a few loads and here's my opinion...

 

When decoying at 'short - medium' range I can honestly say I noticed no difference in kills (or meat damage) between 6s and 7.5s. HOWEVER, I remember shooting one 'rangier' pigeon with a 28g 7.5 that carried on some 100 yards before dropping the other side of a hedge. It took me and the dog 15minutes of searching before he brought it to hand, and it was still alive when he did. Whilst I'd probably only winged it, I couldn't help but wonder if it would have died had I been using a no.6.

 

That was enough to make my mind up and I've firmly settled on 6's now. Fibre wad every time too, as the cost difference is negligible IMO. I think the only reason people choose to use clay loads is cost. There are now several 'budget' pigeon loads on the market that do a fine job, the last lot I bought where £43 a slab in fibre (although the prices have since gone up).

 

For me, I'd rather pay a little more for cartridges and remove any doubt that I could injure a bird with a 7.5, that would possibly have been killed had I used a no.6. Based on an average days shooting, I bet your not even looking at an extra fiver!

I'm sorry, but that is flawed logic.

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I'm sorry, but that is flawed logic.

It isn't, although I admit the statement doesn't read very well.

 

A no.6 will do more damage than a 7.5 (assuming comparable velocity, antimony etc). Although it's probably unlikely, If a single stray pellet hit a pigeon at range I'd rather it was a no.6 than 7.5, hence why I use them.

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