It certainly seems to me that you guys are arguing apples and oranges. Each type of gun has its strong points and weaknesses, especially when it comes to keeping body and soul together. Now it you are able to choose your fight you choose the fight that favors the type of gun you are armed with, but we don't always have that luxury. There are a number of active and retired L.E.O. s who will tell you that gunfights most often happen at 7 yards or less in dim light or darkness. To most of us a 12 ga. pump loaded with 00 buck was the weapon of choice. I would imagine outside of war things were pretty much the same back then. You had one quick shot in less than optimal conditions and it was then run like $#*!, or get real close and personal. The up close and personal encounters did not written up and romanticised like Timothy Murphy making one outstanding shot. Both weapons had their place, and still do.
We need to real here.
Shotguns are increasingly outdated for police use, the AR platform is supplanting the shotgun and it seems to have replaced it completely in some areas. Its easier to use and more "versatile".
A quick shot at close range with a ball is a close range shot with a ball. What its shot from is irrelevant, pistol, rifle, musket, you better PLACE THE SHOT. Just hope they are not inside the muzzle of the typical rifle or fowler of the time.
At short range buckshot has no spread either so its a "solid ball" for all intents and purposes. So pattern a SB at 7 yards with buckshot and see what the actual spread is and then ask how important shot placement is. Its small enough that the idea that buckshot is somehow easier to hit with at short range is simply myth. You gotta place the shot. This IS easier with a longgun and that is the advantage of the shotgun in a short range gunfight. Its not nearly as good for repeat shots/multiple targets as the AR however.
Its a fallacy that you can simply point a load of buckshot in the general direction and get results. This is how people miss and get shot in combat.
This foolishness (shotguns are better at close range) carried over to having shotguns in some infantry squads as late as the VN war. What idiot thought this up I don't know but I bet he never carried one on patrol.... My unit didn't have any but 1/11 inf in the same brigade did.
Stupid. Basically reduced the squads effectiveness by one in almost all situations
I think you will look a long time before finding an shotgun with an infantry squad in Afghanistan..
I do not see this as smoothbore vs rifle. I see it as a mindset that has grown from faulty research or research that was not properly evaluated and belief in various myths concerning the musket/fowler/shotgun and its practicality and usefulness across a wide range of uses.
There seems to be a considerable amount of "don't fire till you see the whites of their eyes" thought process involved here. This is just dandy if you have a squad, company or regiment and are facing a squad, company or regiment. If you are 1 or two guys facing 5 or 10 and are undetected you better not fire closer than 100-150 yards if you want to live through it unless you have at least 1866 Winchesters.
Distance is safety.
Then the problem of of someone coming to a site such at this or one of the re-enactor sites asking about firearms and the "experts" immediately respond by telling the guy he should have a smoothbore since they were more common. They don't care what the person may want the gun for or where he lives, he has to have a smoothbore because of some arbitrary decision by one or more "experts" some of which don't even shoot live ammunition.
While there are times and places where the the rifle is not "documented" most places in Colonial America had rifles. Not a majority but they were there documented from the 1680s on. But we have people who will insist that the rifle is a late comer and was not in use until the F&I War and will even attack or at least ignore "documentation" that disagrees.
Yes there are fine shots who can do well on trail walks etc. But would they do WORSE with a rifle? Do they load the SB as the 18th century user would? Is there ANY documentation for patching balls in SBs in the 18th century? There is detail on rifles using patches but not SBs that I know of. For one thing it gives the rate of fire of a rifle without the accuracy. Rate of fire is the PRIME COMPLAINT against the rifle in the military context. I find paper cartridges work well in rifles for a few rounds and greatly increase the rate of fire but they are not mentioned in period writings either.
So why don't they wad a loose ball (.020-.030 under bore) with paper or tow and shoot that way? Maybe they need to change to SB match rules
Dan