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Welcome to the new PGCA Forum! As well, since it
is new - please read the following:
This is a new forum - so you must REGISTER to this Forum before posting;
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Hi Unregistered,
On July 29th, this site will be moving..! No, really - it's "moving" to another physical location - including servers, gateways, routers - everything - including my coffee cup...
So, from the date of July 29th through July 30 or 31 (shooting for these dates, but - as always, I'm at the mercy of my ISP who has to install the lines to the new location - and we actually get them running ;) ). But - this site, cloud servers and main web will be OFF LINE.
Now, please save these dates!! Please - don't be "that guy" who emails me on the 30th to tell me you "can't open the Parker Website". I'll already know it is offline - and also know that you are "that guy"...
I'll take this notice up and down over the next week or so - and leave it up during the final few days before shutting it off on the 29th..
John D.
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07-30-2015, 01:05 PM
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#31
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Member
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Member Info
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 3,166
Thanks: 2,022
Thanked 5,748 Times in 1,591 Posts
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Try to keep in mind these guns were built long before the invention of the plastic shot cup. Their chokes and pattern performance was done when the entire length of the shot column was in direct contact with the bore. Most of them still shot very tight. If you are concerned about the filler wad raising a portion of the shot column above the shot cup of the wad you are over thinking the process. Load the shell with the shot on top of the filler and you will see the choke performance as the gun was designed. Put the filler wad on top of the shot and you have created a poor man's spreader load.
__________________
Progress is the mortal enemy of the Outdoorsman.
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07-30-2015, 05:22 PM
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#32
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Member
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Member Info
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 1,207
Thanks: 149
Thanked 818 Times in 441 Posts
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I am with Paul on the Fiber Cushion Wad split in half and loading the plastic wad first then adding the fiber wad as a 2nd step.
With 1/2 inch Fiber wads you can adjust the stack height to suit your load. If using a Mec 600 set the wad pressure to compress it some. They have some spring to them, if the stack height is just a bit too high, shot over the wad edge, they will compress some on crimping. Shell is fired they compress even more so no shot touches the barrel.
I have a 10 load that uses 2/3 of a 1/2 inch 16 G fiber. Take all the 1/3 remainders pair them up and load them just like they were a full 2/3 cut.
Over shot for spreaders I use a Polywad 12 G spreader disk, yellow one with the post. It loads and spreads very well in the 10 G shell.
William
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