The 50 cal rifle is now in a friends possession.
It was plenty accurate enough for deer at 60 yards with the right load. I would bet 100$ it would shoot 5 shots into 4.5" at this distance with 100 gr and it would put 2-3 into a nice group. But the externally identical rifle barrel would shoot a lot smaller with 75 gr and will hit a man sized silhouette at 300 yards even though this is not the accuracy load.
I never tested the accuracy of the heavy SB loads at 25 since its pointless from the standpoint of practicality for small game.
I should have shot it at 100 yards I guess but I just can't warm up to 4-5" groups at 50-60 yards. It answered my question after 3-4 range sessions.
The problem is the inevitable fliers. In my experience they will rise up and bite the hunter.
I have no issue with people using smooth bores. Its a choice.
But I put the 50 sb barrel in the rifle because the accounts I continually read did not match my experiences with SBs in various calibers over the years.
A few years ago I shot a match, a pretty easy one, with a new rifle that was not even fully sighted in using a load that was too light it subsequently turned out. I still outshot ALL the scores in the SB match over the same course even though it was not one of my better days. This after being regaled with a "my SB shoots like a rifle" story by one of the competitors the day before. This fallacy is why I went to the trouble of installing a SB barrel in a completed rifle.
The smoothbore, especially if over 20 bore is very effective for some purposes. The shotgun loaded with buckshot has been a standby for close range and/or poor light "social events". They have used for this in one form or another for centuries. Almost 2 years ago I entered the main gate of the USMC Recruit Depot San Diego. There were two young Marines on the Gate. One with a M16 variant and one with a short barreled semi-auto shotgun since they are virtually in San Diego and border the airport, lots of people right outside the wire. A shotgun is a very logical and perhaps the best choice for checking cars at the gate.
But if the Marine is on patrol in Afghanistan the shotgun is not of much use, its just a useless boat anchor.
While many consider the SB to be very versatile I see it as a limited use firearm. Shooting RBs from a SB is like shooting shot from a rifle.
If people live in the east and they shoot deer from blinds and tree stands at 20-30 yards they could just as well use a pistol and save having a long gun in the stand or blind. Most of the animals I shot this year were at SB ranges. Even though I hunt a lot of open country. I tend to hunt areas that give shots under 200 yards
and it usually works. But even in this piece of state land, which has trees on one side of the creek, shots under 120 are hard to come by.
Though the last shot I had at antelope was 187 yards and I blew it. Forgot to put up the second leaf
But it had been a long strenuous stalk that involved running, hill climbing and crawling and the antelope were on the verge of going over a ridge. 1/2 to 1 mile stalks are not unknown BTW and sometimes you gotta run. I
LIKE to hunt like this. I could not set in a tree stand or a blind, just as well shoot out a pickup window. But where people live is often a controlling factor.
I have no use for a SB in this context.
I hunt alone and often kill stuff 1/2 to 1 1/2 miles (dumb but I did it last year, hunting was really tough and the hunting God put the deer there...) from the closest point I can drive. So its often a lot of work. Busting my butt for 30 minutes to an hour crawling etc, then missing the shot because I am hunting with a SB because its "cool" is not very satisfying and YES I HAVE DONE THIS but it was a long time ago, relatively, when I thought a trade gun was "cool". So I hunt with a rifle.
My gripe is the shotgun only spring turkey
but I don't hunt turkey though I have a tag... Maybe in the fall.
BTW I have shot rabbits in Iowa with 15 grains of powder in a 32 rifle shooting patched 0 buckshot. Hunting brush piles in the grove using head shots at 15-20 ft. Ball just pokes a hole in their head. What would I gain with a SB in this context? Would I be able to shoot something like a fox (worth 10$ in the late 1960s) at 100-150 with my normal load? The rifle will do both, the smoothbore is just a rabbit gun in this context.
For a bear at 30 yards? Brown Bess trumps the 32 rifle every time.
Yeah I have had one of these too, a BB Musketoon assembled by Ron Paul. Shoulda kept that one.
Gotta get to the shop and get the radio on, Rush should be on a roll today given the good news.
Dan