Aye, Hungry Horse. I agree that #9 LEAD shot does not do much for harvesting game. However, Super 18 TSS [Tungsten Super Shot] behaves differently than lead. This discussion is not about whether folks should or should not use shot made from lead, bismuth, steel, stone or TSS, it is simply showing what TSS can do in a smoothbore muzzleloader. If one chooses to use completely traditional equipment, please have at it. I have used lead (roundballs down to #8 lead shot) in a muzzleloading flintlock smoothbore to kill most anything that walks, crawls, flys or swims that was legal for me to do so in my little hunting domain. Sometimes, however, I was wishing for a bit more uumph in my loads.
Here is some information that SOME of you might wish to read:
From the TSS manufacturer:
"At 18g/cc (about 60% denser than lead), the penetration energy is so high that it enables one to go down significantly in pellet size, to greatly increase the pellet count and pattern density, while simultaneously increasing the penetration depth of the pellets into the target."
"As for comparing 18g/cc tungsten pellets vs lead (11g/cc), a Super-18 pellet will have about the same penetration energy as a lead pellet 5 sizes larger. So, a Super-18 #9 pellet will penetrate into soft matter at approximately the same depth as a Lead #4 pellet. However, in real life scenarios, on real birds, the Super-18 will actually do better vs lead, because of hardness. It will break bones better, or any other hard material, because of it's hardness and lack of flattening out when it comes into contact with any surface."
Respectfully,
Dan