Tomahawker
Active member
Anybody else just shoot what’s rolling around in the door panel? Been there so long the ink wore off?
Uh yeah.Anybody else just shoot what’s rolling around in the door panel? Been there so long the ink wore off?
Denser because no copper, or is a more pure form of bismuth?
It doesnt shatter into shards when it hits the bird, is completely round, and is denser (heavier).
My pellets are almost always intact too. In fact, I haven't found a shattered pellet in any birds yet this year. I don't know if that is due to luck, or something has changed. But even when I did see it, in past years, it was only one or two birds. I will say that I use bigger pellets than most. Maybe smaller pellets have a greater chance of it happening?So you've experienced a lot of fragmentation with Boss bismuth? I've experienced almost none. I was skeptical before trying it, but the copper plating really helps. Much better than Kent, Bismuth Cartridge Co., Winchester, or any bismuth I've ever hand loaded.
So you've experienced a lot of fragmentation with Boss bismuth? I've experienced almost none. I was skeptical before trying it, but the copper plating really helps. Much better than Kent, Bismuth Cartridge Co., Winchester, or any bismuth I've ever hand loaded.
What size shot was being used? Was it regular or warchief?Every single duck or goose I have cleaned in the last two years. Every. Single. One. From 3 different shooters. Both factory and reloaded shells using their shot. Most every other waterfowler I have talked to has experienced the same and have moved on from their products. Havent cleaned any roosters shot with boss, maybe it works better there.
This season the first 12 geese and 30+ ducks were all full of boss fragments from factory 20ga shells. Now I banned the stuff in the blind and changed what I shoot, anyone who uses it keeps their birds separate the entire time and you take home your own birds. From then on I didn't have to worry about it, its their problem.
What size shot was being used? Was it regular or warchief?
I shot a case of boss and found plenty of fractured pellets in roosters. I think it usually happened when the pellet hit a bone.
As far as keo's/saltcreek bismuth pellets being heavier than others I find that very interesting. I believe most bismuth shot nowadays is an amalgam of bismuth and tin. This is done to help with fracturing, as pure bismuth is very brittle. But tin is lighter than bismuth. So if a pellet had a higher percentage of tin, it's gonna be lighter. Something doesn't add up.
I believe you on your real world results cleaning birds. It's just interesting how you can have a denser g/ml bismuth alloy but have less fracturing? If it's a purer bismuth it would tend to fracture more. Original bismuth loads were very pure and fractured greatly. Bismuth went away for a while due to fracturing until it had tin added to the allow which reduced this tendency, although tin is less dense than bismuth. Maybe they found a metal with a higher density than tin for part of their alloy.The bismuth we use is 9.75 instead of the 9.45-9.55 of most. I have shot 4 boxes of it in the last month and have had ZERO, and i truly mean ZERO fractured pellets recovered. I have recovered a couple dozen whole pellets up against breast bone or in the gut cavities (mallards and canada geese), they are deformed similar to hard lead.
I believe you on your real world results cleaning birds. It's just interesting how you can have a denser g/ml bismuth alloy but have less fracturing? If it's a purer bismuth it would tend to fracture more. Original bismuth loads were very pure and fractured greatly. Bismuth went away for a while due to fracturing until it had tin added to the allow which reduced this tendency, although tin is less dense than bismuth. Maybe they found a metal with a higher density than tin for part of their alloy.