Kutter Is that thirteen thousands or one hundred,thirty thousands?
.013" /thirtheen thou.
Some will feel threatened at .013 but safe when the mic reads .015. Go figure.
The thinnest area in the shotgun bbl will be at the waist (just ahead of the forend) in most any commercial round shotgun bbl you find hanging on a semi, pump or even a SxS shotgun.
Use a wall thickness gauge and check a few, you can see it yourself.
I don't care for the bbl's being that thin in that area and won't play with them if they mic in the range there. I like at least .025 for a minimum there. But others don't mind them like that and if sent off to Merry Olde England for a proofing, a shotgun bbl (damascus or steel) w/a wall thickness of .012/.013 at mid length will go thru proof with everything else.
At the muzzle they can be .013/.015 with no problem.
To put SK or IC jug choke in a bbl like that you only take .001/.0025 out of a side.
The wall is still thicker than the walls of some shotguns that have screw-in choke tubes installed.
Trying to put more than an IC choke in by this method doesn't work well in my experience unless the section is extremely long. The work then isn't worth the results which don't meet expectations anyway.
Better to simply back-bore the bbl and get the choke you want that way in a cartridge gun. Not a good option in a M/L unfortunately.
Ever see some of the paper thin walls that the 'thin-wall' choke tubes are installed in. Crazy stuff.
But unless someone doesn't secure the tube right or puts steel shot through a non-steel shot choke tube,,they work fine. No blowups from pressure ripping the bbl apart.
Sure it's in steel that's other than the 12L14 normally used in M/L bbls. But the pressures are supposed to be that much higher.
There's not much pressure left at the muzzle, even w/smokeless. It burns fast in a shotgun w/a reason.
12ga smokeless breech pressure is around 12,000psi for most over the counter loads.
BP runs about half that.
No need for extra super thick muzzles.