Καλησπέρα σ' όλους και στους φίλους του Cal.16! ...
Νομίζω εξακολουθεί να είναι πολυ ενδιαφέρον το παρακάτω απόσπασμα απο Αμερικανικό άρθρο, ως προς τις προτάσεις φυσιγγίων ,για μικρά και μεσαία πτηνά, και οχι μόνον...
130 & 230 σκάγια αντίστοιχα ως απαίτηση στην απόσταση βολής , και γομώσεις μιας ουγκιάς ( 1 oz / 28 γρ. ) , με ταχύτητες περί τα 355-365 μ/δλ, σε ισορροπημένα καλής ποιότητας φυσίγγια , αρκούν ... κατά τους Αμερικανούς αρθρογράφους τουλάχιστον ...και μάλιστα με το αδελφό διαμέτρημα 20 , πόσο μάλλον με το 16...
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shotshellguide_upland birds intro
UPLAND BIRDS **Requirements: **
Pellet strikes in 30-inch circle: 130 (grouse, chukars); 230 (doves, woodcock)
Minimum pellet energy: 1 foot-pound Doves, woodcock, chukars, Hungarian partridge, and grouse and quail of various subspecies are the natural prey of the small-gauge shotguns Americans love. A trim smallbore makes sense if you plan to carry a gun a lot and shoot it only a little, or if you want to burn up shells without suffering recoil fatigue. The 23⁄4-inch 20 is enough for most upland hunting.
Upland Birds: TOP CHOICE WINCHESTER AA HEAVY TARGET LOAD 23⁄4-INCH 20-GAUGE 1-OUNCE NO. 71⁄2 SHOT
Pellet count: 350
Muzzle velocity: 1200 fps
Pellet energy at 30 yards: 1.5 foot-pounds
Recoil in a 61⁄2-pound shotgun: 18.7 foot-pounds
Average price: $10 for 25 Target loads like these AAs contain high-quality shot, so they pattern very efficiently. For 95 percent of upland hunting, 1 ounce of shot suffices. It’s an ideal payload for the 20-gauge. And 71⁄2s come close to being the all-around upland pellets: An ounce of them yields high enough pellet counts for small birds, and adequate energy is retained to 30-35 yards or more, which is an advantage in case you flush something large. I might switch to No. 8 shot in a 28-gauge load to keep pellet counts high.
Upland Birds: RUNNER-UP Federal Wing-Shok Quail Forever 23⁄4-inch 20-gauge 1-ounce No. 8 shot
410 pellets
1165 fps
[...]
Νομίζω εξακολουθεί να είναι πολυ ενδιαφέρον το παρακάτω απόσπασμα απο Αμερικανικό άρθρο, ως προς τις προτάσεις φυσιγγίων ,για μικρά και μεσαία πτηνά, και οχι μόνον...
130 & 230 σκάγια αντίστοιχα ως απαίτηση στην απόσταση βολής , και γομώσεις μιας ουγκιάς ( 1 oz / 28 γρ. ) , με ταχύτητες περί τα 355-365 μ/δλ, σε ισορροπημένα καλής ποιότητας φυσίγγια , αρκούν ... κατά τους Αμερικανούς αρθρογράφους τουλάχιστον ...και μάλιστα με το αδελφό διαμέτρημα 20 , πόσο μάλλον με το 16...
[...]
The Ultimate Shotshell Guide for Birds, Waterfowl and Turkeys
shotshellguide_upland birds intro
UPLAND BIRDS **Requirements: **
Pellet strikes in 30-inch circle: 130 (grouse, chukars); 230 (doves, woodcock)
Minimum pellet energy: 1 foot-pound Doves, woodcock, chukars, Hungarian partridge, and grouse and quail of various subspecies are the natural prey of the small-gauge shotguns Americans love. A trim smallbore makes sense if you plan to carry a gun a lot and shoot it only a little, or if you want to burn up shells without suffering recoil fatigue. The 23⁄4-inch 20 is enough for most upland hunting.
Upland Birds: TOP CHOICE WINCHESTER AA HEAVY TARGET LOAD 23⁄4-INCH 20-GAUGE 1-OUNCE NO. 71⁄2 SHOT
Pellet count: 350
Muzzle velocity: 1200 fps
Pellet energy at 30 yards: 1.5 foot-pounds
Recoil in a 61⁄2-pound shotgun: 18.7 foot-pounds
Average price: $10 for 25 Target loads like these AAs contain high-quality shot, so they pattern very efficiently. For 95 percent of upland hunting, 1 ounce of shot suffices. It’s an ideal payload for the 20-gauge. And 71⁄2s come close to being the all-around upland pellets: An ounce of them yields high enough pellet counts for small birds, and adequate energy is retained to 30-35 yards or more, which is an advantage in case you flush something large. I might switch to No. 8 shot in a 28-gauge load to keep pellet counts high.
Upland Birds: RUNNER-UP Federal Wing-Shok Quail Forever 23⁄4-inch 20-gauge 1-ounce No. 8 shot
410 pellets
1165 fps
[...]