DoubleTap Posted January 17 Report Share Posted January 17 Hi all, I am considering a 3.5” Winchester SX4 but wanted to know if they’ll cycle 28g clay cartridges (something like an FBlack)? It will be mainly used for Pigeons/Crows and Wildfowl so shouldn’t be firing anything less than 32g through it for 90% of the time. However on the odd occasion I want to put lighter loads (no less than 28g) through it, do they tend to cycle them fine? If a current/previous SX4 owner could give me some insight that would be greatly appreciated. Many thanks in advance, Tayler. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arjimlad Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 I have a SX3 with 3.5" chamber which cycles 28g or 24g clay cartridges fine as long as they are 70mm. It can misfeed 65mm or 67mm clay cartridges It seems happy enough with 67mm 30g pigeon cartridges though. I am very pleased with the gun overall. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
figgy Posted January 19 Report Share Posted January 19 If you buy new break it in with some heavy carts and then make sure to use oil on the sliding parts so it cycles lighter carts ok. I have a Briening maxus 31/2” same gun underneath. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smudger687 Posted January 20 Report Share Posted January 20 On 17/01/2024 at 11:55, DoubleTap said: Hi all, I am considering a 3.5” Winchester SX4 but wanted to know if they’ll cycle 28g clay cartridges (something like an FBlack)? It will be mainly used for Pigeons/Crows and Wildfowl so shouldn’t be firing anything less than 32g through it for 90% of the time. However on the odd occasion I want to put lighter loads (no less than 28g) through it, do they tend to cycle them fine? If a current/previous SX4 owner could give me some insight that would be greatly appreciated. Many thanks in advance, Tayler. In my opinion, a 3.5 inch gun only offers an advantage when the majority of the carts you put through it are 3.5 inches. As you've said crows and pigeons will be a main use for the gun, I'm going to assume that the vast majority of shells you put through it will be 70mm. That means for 90% or so of everything you put through it, you're getting 3/4 of an inch of chamber jump and gas blow by. I'm also going to guess that most of your wildfowling will be using either 70 or 76mm shells? If so, the same argument applies. Why buy a gun that offers an advantage for perhaps 5% of your total shooting, yet gives a disadvantage for the remaining 95%? I would get a 3 inch gun, and if you find you need more firepower than a 3 inch steel cartridge, then you'll be much better served by swapping to a denser non-tox like bismuth or tungsten. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
figgy Posted January 20 Report Share Posted January 20 Most modern guns have long forcing cones so the extra chamber length isn’t really hurting anything. But having the extra in case you need it and the higher proof pressure is a bonus. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DoubleTap Posted January 22 Author Report Share Posted January 22 Thanks all, really appreciate the comments and really helpful. Seems to be good news on the cartridge front so I best start properly looking for a nice camo example!😜 @Smudger687 cheers for the comments, again really appreciated. To be totally honest I’m not looking for a 3.5” in particular, but can only ever find 3.5” guns for sale! If I could find a 3” camo example this would be my preference because (as you said) I’ll very rarely be using 3.5” cartridges. Reason for fancying a Winchester is they seem fairly cheap but reliable. It will be getting abused jumping in and out of the boat, in the hides, covered in water, mud, ice, etc. so I’d rather not spend more money on the arguably better but more expensive Beretta/Browning/Benelli alternatives. Thanks again all, Tayler. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
figgy Posted January 22 Report Share Posted January 22 (edited) Can usually pick up decent used browning maxus for reasonable money. The Shadow Grey SX3 were the best with most durable coating. The camo can wear off. Edited January 22 by figgy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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