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Just purchased a reloading setup and looking for a good starting point. Want a load that burns clean and recoils mildly for a light 12 bore double. Targets would be grouse and woodcock in the woods, tight patterns not helpful. 7/8 oz. or 1oz. of shot I imagine.
thanks
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Joined: Jun 2008
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
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How is a tight pattern not helpful? Holes in your pattern are surely not going to help you put birds in the bag.
Eat Fish, Wear Grundens, Drink Alaskan.
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Nobody said anything about holes in the pattern. Just looking for widest pattern that is still dense enough to reliably kill grouse and woodcock at close ranges. Too dense a pattern can chew up a grouse or woodcock on very close shots, which are often the only shot we have in my stomping grounds. And a larger pattern is easier to hit with in this fast, close shooting.
I understand that harder shot tends to hold tighter patterns, all else being equal, due to less pellet deformation. And that higher velocities can cause more spread, at least with soft shot?
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Joined: Jul 2001
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Campfire Kahuna
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Campfire Kahuna
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Here's a 1-ounce load I've used quite a bit in light 12's. It gets around 1200 fps and is deadly on all sorts of woods birds, from blue grouse down:
Rem. Premier case R209P primer 18.0 grain Ramshot Competition F12S0 wad
“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.” John Steinbeck
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Joined: Nov 2008
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I load mostly 7/8 oz in 12 gauge these days, some 1 oz. My favorite powder, bar none, is Alliant E3. It's cheaper too, as the charges I throw to get about 1175 fps are only 16.8 gr and 16.2 gr respectively (the odd decimals are where the charge bushings wound up to get closest to 1175 fps). Savings are not in the cost per pound, but cost per load. Clean burning also.
Other stuff:
Rem STS hulls Claybuster WAASLs clones, gray for 7/8, pink for 1 oz. Win 209 primer
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Joined: Jun 2008
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tight patterns not helpful. A tight pattern to me would mean a nice evenly spread pattern with no holes in it. I realize you can somewhat open the spread by loading with diferent types of wads. But in reality your choke is going to dictate how open or tight your pattern is going to be.
Eat Fish, Wear Grundens, Drink Alaskan.
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Campfire Regular
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I just realized that I've been loading the same load since I started reloading. Just put fifty together to go shoot clays tomorrow morning. I started in Win cardboard cases and the old 57* RP shur shots plastics, both with card wads. It is 1 1/8 ounce shot and 18.5 grains of Red Dot. There have been a bunch of other loads, but I've been going back to that one since the sixties. I did switch to Windjammer wads a number of years back. I'm gonna watch this thread. The old shoulder needs work, I tore a retina a year to two ago, and... you get the idea. I need to try some lighter stuff that shoots loose in a tight tube. It should be that magical load that can track a grouse or woodcock thru timber or zone in on a clay bird. I don't care if there are holes in the pattern as long as the nice even part of the pattern finds my targets. Bfly
Last edited by Blackfly1; 06/17/11.
Be nice and work hard, you never have enough time or friends.
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Blackfly1 I like my chokes like I like my ladies, TIGHT. But every once in a while its not bad to have a loose one to remind you just how good the tight ones are!
Eat Fish, Wear Grundens, Drink Alaskan.
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Montana, Nicely put! Bfly
Be nice and work hard, you never have enough time or friends.
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Campfire Outfitter
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My favorite powders for 7/8ths loads are American Select and Tightwad. Tightwad does better in Fitasc type loads (i.e. fast; 1350 or so fps). American Select is just so flexible, it's easy to go down into the 1150 range and still have consistent loads.
My experience is that any quality wad with a sensible load in the 1200 fps range gives good patterns. HHT, Dutch.
Sic Semper Tyrannis
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
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Go to the Winchester or Remington website and duplicate their light target load formula. Time proven and tested. You probably can't do any better. At Ruffed Grouse/Woodcock distance pointing means more than choke. Seen a lot of Grouse come to rest in the leaves. Few have been blown up irrespective of choke.
Last edited by battue; 06/19/11.
laissez les bons temps rouler
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Campfire Regular
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Campfire Regular
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I've just started making this load for my boys for shooting clays with a 12 gauge. Very soft shooting and still busts clays with authority. 16 g Clays Win Waa12 SL wad (pink) Win 209 primer with Win AA hulls. This load shoots around 1125 fps.
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Campfire Tracker
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Shoulder, I have loaded a pile of 7\8 oz loads and they break close targets well. It started when lead price went from 16 to 18 a bag to OMG its how much? I have had the best luck with the winchester gray wad WAA12L, but the SL will crimp in the AA hulls or the STS. I am trying to get thru a 4 pound jug of Red Dot that I bought during the powder shortage. It is just not as clean as the Clays. I am loading a very mild load that is cycling a pair of Rem, 1100's with cut down stocks. My objective is a very soft shooting load that will give minimal recoil for new shooters. We shoot both guns with a skeet choke and stay on targets that are not far out. The kids have been crushing them. It is amazing how many more shells they will shoot with the light stuff. Our goal is easy to break targets with kids having a good time to start. Montana is right if the range is longer. But we just limit the distance. Hodgden has a very good site with data for just about any wad/hull combo you can think of. They give a range of speeds. The loads are vary easy to shoot out of a fixed breach gun. Remington has a 7\8 1100 fps factory load if you want to try it.
I used to only shoot shotguns and rimfires, then I made the mistake of getting a subscription to handloader.......
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Joined: Aug 2010
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Aug 2010
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Just purchased a reloading setup and looking for a good starting point. Want a load that burns clean and recoils mildly for a light 12 bore double. Targets would be grouse and woodcock in the woods, tight patterns not helpful. 7/8 oz. or 1oz. of shot I imagine.
thanks 7/8 and 1 oz. loads have worked very well on singles and first shot on doubles (talking trap here). I've used my fox sterlingworth (old double made in 1910) with light loads with great success. Here are some of the loads that have worked well for me in both the game fields and money fields , sorry I meant trap fields: Hope you guys are having a hell of a father's day
I try to stick with the basics, they do so well. Nothing fancy mind you, just plain jane will get it done with style. You want to see an animal drop right now? Shoot him in the ear hole. BSA MAGA
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Joined: Aug 2010
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
Joined: Aug 2010
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I've just started making this load for my boys for shooting clays with a 12 gauge. Very soft shooting and still busts clays with authority. 16 g Clays Win Waa12 SL wad (pink) Win 209 primer with Win AA hulls. This load shoots around 1125 fps. Spot on brother, that is a good load.
I try to stick with the basics, they do so well. Nothing fancy mind you, just plain jane will get it done with style. You want to see an animal drop right now? Shoot him in the ear hole. BSA MAGA
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Joined: Feb 2001
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Campfire Regular
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My bad, that is a one ounce load. I thought about going to a 7/8 oz load, but my nine year old has no problem shooting this through my Benelli. Last night my boys (12 and 9) played Annie Oakley with a twelve vs a twenty and ended up in a dead heat. May do that again this evening with a few neighbor boys, hard to top that for a Father's day
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BSA that second Fox Gun looks like mine. I love shooting that one. My brother in law sold it to me a while back. I think he is still thinking he should have kept it. Mine is 30" and the chokes are tight. But it sure is a fun shooter. Do you shoot trap with yours?
I used to only shoot shotguns and rimfires, then I made the mistake of getting a subscription to handloader.......
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Joined: Aug 2010
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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BSA that second Fox Gun looks like mine. I love shooting that one. My brother in law sold it to me a while back. I think he is still thinking he should have kept it. Mine is 30" and the chokes are tight. But it sure is a fun shooter. Do you shoot trap with yours? Not on a regular basis but it is fun to take them out every once in a while. The one on the top (previous picture) is my fox model B and the one on the bottom is the sterlingworth. The sterlingworth is my favorite field gun though, it is light handles awesome and fits me like a glove. It also carries great which is a plus on a long day of bird hunting . My regular trap guns are my BT-99 and yes a remington 870 wingmaster field grade with a trap barrel on it (it is also a left hander and handles like a dream). When I have to run steel on waterfall I use the old el-cheapo rem 870 express On a side note for my sterlingworth, I have even taken some nice turkey out there a long way with it (with 2 3/4" turkey loads of course). It's laid down every turkey I've pointed it at and I love the old girl. It was my great grandfather's who was also left handed. One I'll never get rid of.
I try to stick with the basics, they do so well. Nothing fancy mind you, just plain jane will get it done with style. You want to see an animal drop right now? Shoot him in the ear hole. BSA MAGA
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Campfire Member
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Blackfly1 I like my chokes like I like my ladies, TIGHT. But every once in a while its not bad to have a loose one to remind you just how good the tight ones are! Haha. Quite possibly the best quote I have read on this site.
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