Have been a shotgun shooter for over 50 years. Have patterned many conventional shotguns and well know and observe that tighter levels of choke yield denser patterns at a given distance, or equivalently dense patterns at a farther distance. Of course most choke descriptions are described as percentages of pellets within a 30" circle, because the number of pellets to begin with varies by load (ounces) and by shot size. Pellet size being chosen for penetration (individual pellet energy) for the game being shot at the range you expect to shoot them. Many variables, much anecdotal information available, conventional "wisdom" and mere speculation. I am sure this thread will repeat much of this as 101 different absolute (and some contradictory) facts are expressed.
None-the-less, here is my question. How in the heck does choke actually work?
For years I just figured that by making the muzzle smaller, it just took the shot a little longer to spread back out, and given how fast they are moving forward, relative to the outward spread speed of the cloud of shot, that a specific shot pattern density would happen farther away. So, using 12 ga. as an example, assuming a bore of .729" straight cylinder (no choke constriction) and this table.
Shot column leaves a .729 muzzle, 40% of the shot in circle. Squeeze it down to .709" (modified constriction of .020") and now 60% are in the circle. And many examples can be made. A 20 ga. cylinder of .615 has 40% at 40 yards, constricted down to .601" (a 20 ga. modified restriction of .014") does 60% at this distance.
Now we consider a jug choke, as used in a ML, where the internal bore is widened out for a ways, but then squeezed back down, but only to the bore it originally was. So there must be more to how a choke works than simply the exiting diameter.
Then when I consider that the ML shooter has (between some minimum and maximum amount) a basically infinite range of load ounces available (vs the conventional loads commercially available for breach loading shotguns), and when I consider that pattern density that matters is the actual number of pellets in the target area (not a percentage), is it not just as easy (or easier even) for the ML shotgun shooter to affect
actual shot pattern density by changing load exiting his straight bored gun and just forget all about this jug choking idea?
For disclosure, I have never shot a ML shotgun, but hope to build one winter '24 - '25 (hopefully with the pending Kibler fowler kit).