The reason I'm asking is that I just purchased a new Benelli M2 and a new Ithaca Turkey Slayer both in 20 gauge and with 24" barrels. My friend and I were shooting fed's HW 3" #7's for testing at a distance of 30 yards at a piece of thick heavy ply wood that was 4ft tall x 3ft wide. For targets we were testing large paper sheets taped to the board. As we begin to shoot both guns we noticed the ply wood would shake more and in many cases fall over using the Ithaca where the M2 seemed to move it MUCH less. I have read before there is indeed a very slight loss with autos but never imagined you could see such a difference. Does this seem right? What else could be different? Both guns using .575 tubes and same ammo. If there is this much difference then makes me want a pump again.
I can't believe it would be much if at all noticable. I really would like to hear some more input on this.
Roy
I would say only on the shoulder. :angel9:
Was the pattern tighter on the 37?
God Bless,
David B.
Quote from: BOFF on March 29, 2012, 09:50:28 PM
I would say only on the shoulder. :angel9:
Was the pattern tighter on the 37?
God Bless,
David B.
It was close with both guns. Now the hevi shot 13 #6 were definitly tighter with Benelli. Howevere fed hw were very close. Sure wish I had a chronograph.
If I could find to identical books then I may see a difference in penetration. Gonna see what I can come up with for testing.
I cant imagine there would be that much difference But I would be very interested in seeing the results of any testing you do. I shoot pumps but have been looking for an auto too toy with, this may very well change my mind
Justin
Is the Benelli back bored? Seems like if the two barrels of the 37 and M2 are not the same bore, or forcing cone lengthened, velocity might be different?
God Bless,
David B.
Quote from: BOFF on March 30, 2012, 12:02:14 PM
Is the Benelli back bored? Seems like if the two barrels of the 37 and M2 are not the same bore, or forcing cone lengthened, velocity might be different?
God Bless,
David B.
Good point but I have no idea. Maybe someone else will chime in.
Don't know, but it sure seems like it.
I see the same thing at the boards, my BPS knocks the boards over, and my gas guns, while patterning fine, don't even make the board flinch.
I also agree about the shoulder thing, pumps kick more for me....
mudhen
If the two gun/barrel/choke combinations gave very different shot strings, that might give a different impression in how hard the board was hit. I don't think it would make much difference to the turkey though.
yes they do. Just like bolt actions and single shot (rifles and shotguns) shoot harder and kick harder than pumps and autos.
Sorry if I ruffle feathers here. However, folks who perceive that pumps shoot significantly "harder" than autoloaders either don't own or don't routinely use a chronograph. I've run thousands of loads from hundreds of guns over my chronographs. I've found that pumps just don't meaningfully push shot charges faster than autoloaders.
Yeah, physics mandates some gas is diverted to work the action rather than push the charge with autoloaders. However, IME, it's far less than the shot-to-shot standard deviation of the same load in the same gun, which means that it isn't much.
Quote from: HuntSource on March 30, 2012, 10:24:43 PM
Sorry if I ruffle feathers here. However, folks who perceive that pumps shoot significantly "harder" than autoloaders either don't own or don't routinely use a chronograph. I've run thousands of loads from hundreds of guns over my chronographs. I've found that pumps just don't meaningfully push shot charges faster than autoloaders.
Yeah, physics mandates some gas is diverted to work the action rather than push the charge with autoloaders. However, IME, it's far less than the shot-to-shot standard deviation of the same load in the same gun, which means that it isn't much.
x 2
Quote from: BOFF on March 29, 2012, 09:50:28 PM
I would say only on the shoulder. :angel9:
Was the pattern tighter on the 37?
God Bless,
David B.
That would be my guess too!
It was tighter with benelli hevi 13#6 but about same with fed he #7.
They will but you will not see it. Now on the target side you will see the Bolt gun work and shoot harder when I say harder not as hit hard but as a pattern harder. This is only because you can play with the Head Space and get a chamber just the way you want it. Now I have seen on target guns a bolt will need a bigger choke to do the same thing that a pump will take a .005 to .008 smaller choke.
The head space, chamber I.D. and choke/chamber centered with the bore is why you see some of the guns go big numbers and some shoot like junk.