Mostly Nevada so I use lead.Are you using #4 steel ? I see you are in CA also which is lead free
Mostly Nevada so I use lead.Are you using #4 steel ? I see you are in CA also which is lead free
I can totally see that with TSS buckshot, being round and hard, it will not flatten out and do more damage like a lead round ball can do out of a shotgun or muzzle loader, it just stays round and punches through, much like a full metal jacket would do, and doesn't even cut a hole, but being round, more "moves" the tissue out of the way, allowing it to partially close back up after passing through. It certainly will punch through though!!I also load some TSS buckshot loads for bear defense. #4 buckshot and single 0 buckshot. It makes a great in-your-face bear defense round from a short barrelled shotgun. But head shots only, IMO.
I'm not overly impressed using the TSS buckshot for body hits on large game. We finished off a wounded bear grizzly with the TSS single 0 buckshot once. Smallish bear at about 10yds in the willows and ladders. Complete body penetration thru the chest, but the shock and knockdown effect was underwhelming. Great for skull shots, but only the body was visible in a small opening.
I get ~14" measured penetration in live birch tree trunks with the single 0 TSS buckshot.
Know a guy that's killed some hogs and deer using TSS #4 buckshot in the south. It kills, but generally requires some tracking with body hits. With dogs, recovery is good. But without dogs, he says the hogs/deer bleed very little, and recovery can be difficult in thick woods. He stopped using TSS buckshot on large game. Tried it, but same as I, was underwhelmed with the lack of knockout/knockdown effect with body hits, in spite of the good penetration.
You could shoot #10 TTS with a .410 3/8oz giving ~190 pellets and will be lethal on any duck to 60 yards with no recoil like a 12 gauge, which honestly is what I don't like about waterfowl hunting, magnum steel loads with horrible ballistics. I bought bulk TSS and ended up about $26 per pound which gives about 42 shells worth at 3/8oz loads. It probably comes out cheaper than the Black Cloud and easy on the shoulder too.Having tried most all of the options I only shoot Black Cloud when non-toxic is required, mostly waterfowl but also upland on WMAs or reservations. It seems to be the best value, patterns well and as good of knockdown power as anything. I have tried a lot of fancy choke tubes and I really don't see much advantage to spending the money on them unless you are competing.
And better performance to boot....You could shoot #10 TTS with a .410 3/8oz giving ~190 pellets and will be lethal on any duck to 60 yards with no recoil like a 12 gauge, which honestly is what I don't like about waterfowl hunting, magnum steel loads with horrible ballistics. I bought bulk TSS and ended up about $26 per pound which gives about 42 shells worth at 3/8oz loads. It probably comes out cheaper than the Black Cloud and easy on the shoulder too.