Jump to content

20 Gauge


rwade545
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hi,

 

Well a while back I decided to treat myself to a beretta silver pigeon in 20 bore. Have a 12 guage 687 el and get on great with it.

 

Have been using the 20 guage for some walk up rough shooting and am not getting the clean kills I did with the 12. Currently using gamebore gold 30gram number 6 wich are very soft on the shoulder ( use game bore 30 gram black gold number 6 in the 12). With the 12 it was rare that birds were not dead in the air and easily picked up but using the 20 I have had around 1/2 or more of the birds shot run on, a lot were not picks after appearing hard hit. Just not getting the clean kills I am used to wich is a pitty as shot well with the 20. Keep the ranges at which I take shots much the same.

 

In the end used a 12 at the end of the day and was back up to a good clean kill ration. I know a lot of people use a 20 successfully on driven birds but was wondering if any one else using a 20 for walk up shooting?

 

Any ideas as to what I can change? What cartridges is everyone else using? I'm thinking of going up to number 5s.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi

 

I also own 12s and 20s and I fear the issue you have is with density of the shot pattern i.e a 20g will have less shot in a circle than a 12

 

I use mainly my 20s as they are so much lighter for walked up rough shooting but find the same as you i hit more birds dead with the 12s!

You need to be a bit more deadly with your 20.

Afraid its a case of practise makes you better with a 20 also switching guns is not good and plays with the mind on which guns best! It can just be a physcological matter!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Try rc sipes in fibre wad 5 instead of 6 and pattern the two guns i found some makes in heavy loads blew the pattern to bits

Also found in walked up rough shooting I was shooting at the back of the bird and they took a bit more stopping

I shoot a beretta 20 to Shoot over spaniels for field trials

12 the rest of the time

Edited by Old farrier
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do you find you are looking at more of the rib on your 20? I have a 12 and 20 bore Beretta and the view down the 12 looks a lot better on mine .

Depends which one I had mine fitted to prevent that happening but if I just pick up one from the rack the sight picture is different

Gun fit very important

Pattern test for cartridge choice

Ballance

All important to shoot well

Hope this helps

All the best

Of

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi

 

I also own 12s and 20s and I fear the issue you have is with density of the shot pattern i.e a 20g will have less shot in a circle than a 12

!!

If the guns are choked the same they will have the same amount of pellets in a 30" circle if both are 30g 6s. Edited by welshwarrior
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If the guns are choked the same they will have the same amount of pellets in a 30" circle if both are 30g 6s.

 

I'm happy to bow to your knowledge here but just thinking about it logically (and if I'm interpreting what you're saying correctly) then how can that be true?

If you're putting the same amount of lead down barrels of different sizes then will they pattern the same at the same distance?

 

E.g. if you had an O/U shotgun with a top barrel that was 12g and a bottom barrel that was 20g then surely they would pattern differently even if you put 30g 6's in both barrels?

I know that the shape of the barrel (forcing cone, choke, etc) will control the shot pattern but can you really shape a 20g barrel to give exactly the same performance as a 12g barrel?

 

Convention might suggest that the larger loads on smaller barrels will not perform as well as you try to force large amounts of lead down smaller barrels.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Had this problem myself when I exclusively used a 20 bore. Believe it or not but I got the best patterns out of 24gram carts when I patterned a few different shells and by far game bore were my least favoured shell in the 20. If you can get them get hull high pheasant, they do a 28 gram version too.

 

Or if your really lucky I can recommend fioochi just availability that's the problem with these.

 

As Welsh warrior says best thing to do is pattern them back to back it may be gun fit over cartridge

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I'm happy to bow to your knowledge here but just thinking about it logically (and if I'm interpreting what you're saying correctly) then how can that be true?

If you're putting the same amount of lead down barrels of different sizes then will they pattern the same at the same distance?

 

E.g. if you had an O/U shotgun with a top barrel that was 12g and a bottom barrel that was 20g then surely they would pattern differently even if you put 30g 6's in both barrels?

I know that the shape of the barrel (forcing cone, choke, etc) will control the shot pattern but can you really shape a 20g barrel to give exactly the same performance as a 12g barrel?

 

Convention might suggest that the larger loads on smaller barrels will not perform as well as you try to force large amounts of lead down smaller barrels.

 

30 gram of 6s is 30 gram of 6s whatever you throw it out of, same choke should give very similar patterns. Choke is relative to bore size so whatever bore it is you'll still be throwing the same sort of patterns with the same loads

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi

 

I also own 12s and 20s and I fear the issue you have is with density of the shot pattern i.e a 20g will have less shot in a circle than a 12

 

I use mainly my 20s as they are so much lighter for walked up rough shooting but find the same as you i hit more birds dead with the 12s!

You need to be a bit more deadly with your 20.

Afraid its a case of practise makes you better with a 20 also switching guns is not good and plays with the mind on which guns best! It can just be a physcological matter!!

 

 

 

Put simply you have less margin for error in a 20 than a 12! :good:

 

EDIT

Just noticed that apparently an exactly similar load is being used in each.

 

SO...the 20 is not being pointed in the right place then, simple!

Edited by Dekers
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

30 gram of 6s is 30 gram of 6s whatever you throw it out of, same choke should give very similar patterns. Choke is relative to bore size so whatever bore it is you'll still be throwing the same sort of patterns with the same loads

 

You may be right, I don't know, thats why I'm questioning it really.

 

I just thought that whilst they might be the same weights of lead that they would perform differently depending on bore sizes, perhaps pattern on a flat plate might be similar at a set distance once all the shot has hit home but surely shot string would be different?

 

If a 20g really does perform the same as a 12g then I can't see why 12g ever became popular, except for clays where the extra weight might help if you're putting hundreds of cartridges through it in a day and/or using really heavy loads.

 

For game shooting I would imagine many people would chose a 20g if its peformance is exactly the same as a 12g.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You may be right, I don't know, thats why I'm questioning it really.

 

I just thought that whilst they might be the same weights of lead that they would perform differently depending on bore sizes, perhaps pattern on a flat plate might be similar at a set distance once all the shot has hit home but surely shot string would be different?

 

If a 20g really does perform the same as a 12g then I can't see why 12g ever became popular, except for clays where the extra weight might help if you're putting hundreds of cartridges through it in a day and/or using really heavy loads.

 

For game shooting I would imagine many people would chose a 20g if its peformance is exactly the same as a 12g.

There is a theoretical advantage to a 12 bore over a 20 bore. The smaller diameter of the 20 bore means that you will have a longer shot column and more shot scrubbing on the inside of the barrel. This translates to more deformed shot for the same weight shot charge. Notice I said "theoretical advantage". I have never been able to notice this advantage in the field. Almost all of my hunting is done with a 20 bore. I am always prudent to use the best cartridges available. Good hard shot and good wads.

 

My hunting here in the States is probably of a different type than yours, but I think a 20 is a very useful bore.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bought a 687 when they first came out in the 80`s,shot so badly with ,I patterned it....the quarter choke barrle was shooting pretty good FULL patterns!

Had it opened to cylinder and light quarter which much improved it.Only used 24g cartridges for everything.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If both 20 and 12 bore cartridges have the same shot size and the same load e.g. 28gr 6 and the respective guns have the same choke constriction, then the amount of pellets in the 30" circle should be pretty similar.

 

However, one very important factor that has not been mentioned is the amount of powder used to propell the charge! The charge used in the 20 bore will be appreciably less tha the charge in the 12 bore consequently the kinetic energy will be less due to the slower speed (Having gained this energy during its acceleration the body maintains this kinetic energy unless its speed changes).

 

So there you have it, the slower 20 bore will kill with the same energy up to a certain distance and the 12 a bit further.

 

Check the speed of your cartridge in FPS and you will find that the lighter the load - the faster the cartridge will be.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If both 20 and 12 bore cartridges have the same shot size and the same load e.g. 28gr 6 and the respective guns have the same choke constriction, then the amount of pellets in the 30" circle should be pretty similar.

 

However, one very important factor that has not been mentioned is the amount of powder used to propell the charge! The charge used in the 20 bore will be appreciably less tha the charge in the 12 bore consequently the kinetic energy will be less due to the slower speed (Having gained this energy during its acceleration the body maintains this kinetic energy unless its speed changes).

 

So there you have it, the slower 20 bore will kill with the same energy up to a certain distance and the 12 a bit further.

 

Check the speed of your cartridge in FPS and you will find that the lighter the load - the faster the cartridge will be.

 

:rolleyes:

 

The propellant in a 20 gauge cartridge will be slower generally for any given shot weight but will propel the shot at a similar speed to a 12 gauge. As an example I can use 21 grains of a fast powder such as Vectan AS with 28 grams of shot in a 12 gauge and get pretty much the same result as I would using a 20 grains of a slow powder such as Vectan A0 in a 20 gauge cartridge with 28 grams of shot. They will both have pretty much identical killing abilities. It's about choosing the correct components for any given application and the volume of powder is largely irrelevant when comparing different gauges :good:

Edited by sitsinhedges
Link to comment
Share on other sites

:rolleyes:

 

The propellant in a 20 gauge cartridge will be slower generally for any given shot weight but will propel the shot at a similar speed to a 12 gauge. As an example I can use 21 grains of a fast powder such as Vectan AS with 28 grams of shot in a 12 gauge and get pretty much the same result as I would using a 20 grains of a slow powder such as Vectan A0 in a 20 gauge cartridge with 28 grams of shot. They will both have pretty much identical killing abilities. It's about choosing the correct components for any given application and the volume of powder is largely irrelevant when comparing different gauges :good:

Your correct but the object of the discussion is that "all other things being equal" - that the powder is the same type, then the smaller charge will be less effective at the same range.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Your correct but the object of the discussion is that "all other things being equal" - that the powder is the same type, then the smaller charge will be less effective at the same range.

If the powder is the same type and the shotload is the same the gun with the smaller bore would probably blow up due to overpressure. It wouldn't just go more slowly. The only way around that is to have significantly less shot in the smaller tube but then you're not comparing anything remotely similar so any comparison is pointless. Smaller bores tackle propelling higher payloads at normal speeds by using slower powders. Larger bores need faster powders to do the same to maintain pressures and get an efficient burn.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...