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Middle of the road for a little more shot than 8, a little more power than 9.
1/2 ounce 8 = 205 8.5 = 245 9 = 292 3/4 ounce 8 = 307 8.5 = 373 9 = 439 |
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This though all reminds me of the old saying that fishing plug designers design fishing plugs to catch fishermen, not fish!!! |
Used commonly for the first shot in trap doubles.
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Mark, I shoot #8 or #7 normally. Rarely, if ever, #9 or 7 1/2.
For my upland hunting I generally shoot #8 in both tubes in early season and #8 in the right tube with #7 in the left tube for later in the season. I shoot #8 exclusively on clays. . |
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8.5's are a great too for 7/8 oz spreader loads for pattern density. |
I always wondered if the shot manufacturers produce a lot of "off-spec" shot and the 1/2 sizes were a way to sell it rather than have to reprocess it.
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That makes good sense.
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Back around 1995, Federal offered a 1 ounce 8 1/2 paper handicap load.
Used them at The Grand American and other Trap shoots that year. Might even have a box tucked away. Wish they were still available. Trap3 |
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My buddy, Chuck, who helped me with the #10 article, measures every batch of shot, and sorts them by size. As an example: some number 7 1/2 Shot might be actually 7 1/4s. Some 8s might actually be 8 1/4 size. Right in the middle is 8 1/2s. More pellets in the pattern than 8s, more energy than 9s. I don't let the shot size get in my head. See the bird, shoot the bird. |
Back in the late 60's Remington used to claim that their shotmaking process was the highest volume precision manufacturing operation in the US
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