The extra weight will help build momentum in the
swing, which can be very helpful for dove, ducks and
sporting clays targets. But there is a trade-off for
end-of-the-day pheasant, where a tired lead hand might
cause sluggish barrel movement. A couple extra ounces
of muzzle weight that is of little consequence when
the day is young, takes on significance as shadows
lengthen.
However . . . they add a
lot of flexibility to choke choice. Obviously
true, but the distances at which birds are taken does
not lend itself to a high degree of micro-management.
The scary thing is that at the instant of flush, the
hunter can easily lose his focus on the target if he
asks himself: "Omigosh! Which chokes do I have in the
gun?" This moment of self-doubt -- a nanosecond
squandered on indecision -- is a good way to talk
yourself out of the target. Lots of bird hunters
simply put in a set of chokes that get the job done
and leave them in.
Our fixed choke
heritage . . . dates back to a time (when the
dollar was a lot stronger against the European
currencies than it is today) when double guns were
commonly available in choke combinations married to
barrel lengths: that is, 26" barrels had Improved
Cylinder and Modified chokes and 28"barrels were
Modified and Full choke. Two-barrel and three-barrel
sets with various choke combinations were not
uncommon.
It is interesting to note that
high-profile double gun manufacturers like ,
Merkel, Parker Reproductions and the new Kimber Valier
II offer only fixed choke guns -- usually Improved
Cylinder and Modified -- thus boiling the
decision-making process down to a single or double
trigger choice. However, just because a shotgun is
equipped with fixed chokes does not mean you are "done
dancing." While it is true that, in theory, choke
constrictions are quite specific (industry
specifications for Improved Cylinder for 20 gauge, for
example, are .007") in practice getting within .002"
either way is often considered "close enough for
government work," as the saying goes. Note however
that while a .002" difference is not significant in 12
gauge; it's a big one in smaller gauges like 20 and
28.
There is a tendency for
Improved Cylinder -- especially in the smaller gauges
-- to shoot tighter than most bird hunters need. As
suggested above, factory boring often errs on the
tight side. The idea being that while you can always
take out some choke constriction, you can't put it
back. Plus, today's ammunition is infinitely more
efficient than when choke standards were established
early in the last century. Today's shotshells shoot
tighter than they did before the invention of shot
wads and hard shot. If you are hunting over
close-working dogs, tight chokes and tight ammunition
are a poor combination.
This
useful chart from Winchester demonstrates relative
pattern sizes for different chokes at various
distances.
Taking the cure . . .
there are two ways to deal with the too-tight fixed
choke problem. If you are a hand-loader, the answer is
an easy one -- brew up some spreader or brush loads
and the problem is solved. These types of loads
generally give you about a one notch larger pattern
than the barrel is marked, so your Modified barrel
might deliver an Improved Cylinder pattern -- or --
your tight Improved Cylinder barrel might give you a
Skeet pattern. Hand-loading spreader or brush loads is
a tedious process -- not well suited to mass
production (which explains why they are not commonly
available over the counter) -- but suggests a skill
level to which you might reasonably aspire.
Fixed chokes offer a broad
canvas upon which to create a shooting masterpiece,
that perfectly serves your needs. A good man with a
reamer can, for example, open the chokes to whatever
lesser constrictions are required. If you only shoot
bobs, Cylinder and Skeet might be what you want. The
secrets of elliptical boring are not commonly
flaunted, but if you are a woodcock hunter, a skilled
practitioner can coax your right barrel into shooting
six inches higher than where you are looking. You
could perch any upwardly mobile bird on the front
sight and get more than tail feathers. Elliptical
boring allows the point of impact to be moved about
nine inches in any direction. Twenty/20 vision can be
restored in a cross-eyed double with this low-tech
technology. Magic? Sure. That's why he gets the big
money.
Will changing the original
chokes hurt the resale value of a fine double? No more
than improving the length of pull or gaining the
advantage of cast on a birdgun. It's really a
no-brainer. When a gun becomes an extension of your
will (sort of defined by routinely taking doubles and
signified by new confidence levels and marked
personality changes) they are going to have to pry
your fingers off to get it away from you. What
possible reason would you have for voluntarily parting
with a gun that so suits you?
Be buried with it. Heaven is
where birds flush at easy angles. The other
destination features head-high weeds, plum thickets
and flushes into the sun; where you are going to need
all the help you can get!
.