I’d get confused with what sheLoL to grab from what vest pocket.First shot right IC barrel #6 If I need second shot left Mod barrel #5 Dead is Dead
I wear a shell belt with closed loops. Since 6's are the primary load the primers are blackened with a magic marker making ID easy. Not sure why shell belts aren't mentioned on this website more often. Only weight in the vest should be a bird.I’d get confused with what sheLoL to grab from what vest pocket.
My scuba gear is set up without a belt, it’s all integrated, as is my upland rig. I hate wearing an exterior belt. My vest has a great shoulder padding and waste suspension system and it works well. It has a pocket the pertly holds a shell box, one on each side if I choose. I guess I’ll stick with shooting a single load in my double barrels.I wear a shell belt with closed loops. Since 6's are the primary load the primers are blackened with a magic marker making ID easy. Not sure why shell belts aren't mentioned on this website more often. Only weight in the vest should be a bird.
Now, when I am in Kansas and know I am in quail country, I keep a handful of 7 1/2’s in a pocket.Whether 5’s or 6’s, not much difference, just playing mind games or because you just have them. While hunting pheasants and quail in Kansas, I swear it was impossible to shoot a quail with 6’s on a straight away shot, 8’s were the equalizer. Nice to have choices. My shell belt also carries my leatherman and keeps the weight on my waist. Has worked for over forty years and will be passed down to my grandson.
At that range either shto size is fine, especially on stocked birds. I hunt springer spaniels as well and my typical shot is at about 30 yards. i also hunt quite a few released birds where nontoxic is required. For that I prefer #5 or #4 and yes Kent Fasteel is great there too. When hunting wild upland, and using lead, I like fiocchi golden pheasant #5 nickel plated lead. kent fast lead #5 is also in my bag when I can’t find the Fiocchi.I finally found a shell my gun likes. Kent fast lead 12 gauge number 5 and 6. Both are giving me excellent patterns at 30 yards with a modified choke. I hunt over a flusher and most of my shots are around 20-35 yards on stocked birds. Which one would you choose? The paper is 36"x32".View attachment 5386View attachment 5387
Neither you nor the bird will know the difference between those loads in your scenario, if you can put the pattern on them!I finally found a shell my gun likes. Kent fast lead 12 gauge number 5 and 6. Both are giving me excellent patterns at 30 yards with a modified choke. I hunt over a flusher and most of my shots are around 20-35 yards on stocked birds. Which one would you choose? The paper is 36"x32".
So those would be the 1-3/8 oz loads? That's pretty stout, but obviously nothing wrong with it. I know there's a difference between pen-reared birds & wild ones. I know MOST of your shots are close-ish. And I know everyone has a comfort level when it comes to range.I finally found a shell my gun likes. Kent fast lead 12 gauge number 5 and 6. Both are giving me excellent patterns at 30 yards with a modified choke. I hunt over a flusher and most of my shots are around 20-35 yards on stocked birds. Which one would you choose? The paper is 36"x32".
They are definitely stout loads but unfortunately I patterned around 5 different loads with this gun and these are the only ones that gave me a good pattern. The 1200-1330fps load patterns were awful.So those would be the 1-3/8 oz loads? That's pretty stout, but obviously nothing wrong with it. I know there's a difference between pen-reared birds & wild ones. I know MOST of your shots are close-ish. And I know everyone has a comfort level when it comes to range.
But I prefer to be prepared to kill a rooster at 50+ yards at any time (not straight-away shots). So I shoot #5 lead or #4 bismuth (& would shoot #2 steel if I shot steel). Those shot sizes also really help on straight-away shots in the 30-35 yd vicinity, where 6's struggle to penetrate sufficiently. Nothing wrong with extra pellet energy on the closer shots either. As remy mentioned above, more pellets will blow right through, leaving fewer feathers & stuff to remove.
FYI, bumping muzzle velocity (keeping shot size the same) from 1200 to 1500 only gains you about 10 yds effective range, while increasing recoil about 50%.