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5/6/2015 5:37:23 PM EDT
Does it have any negative effect on bore or rifling?

I am thinking about getting a couple of boxes and shooting some big wood boring bees. Kind of like mini clay pigeons with a pistol.
5/6/2015 5:48:47 PM EDT
[#1]
Quoted:
Does it have any negative effect on bore or rifling?

I am thinking about getting a couple of boxes and shooting some big wood boring bees. Kind of like mini clay pigeons with a pistol.
View Quote


No, but shooting birdshot through a rifled bore can create a "doughnut" pattern, where the center is hollow.
5/6/2015 6:05:31 PM EDT
[#2]
Does someone make smooth bore 22 barrels?
5/6/2015 6:11:57 PM EDT
[#3]
Last one I know of was Savage.  They sold a Mark I smoothbore.  They stopped making them I think - Buds was closing them out at $200 a couple of years ago and I snagged one.  Not sure if anyone catalogs them currently.

ETA: I seriously considered contacting Redman and having them sell me some barrel liners before they rifled them, but then I bought the savage.
5/6/2015 9:34:21 PM EDT
[#4]
Look for a remington 121 or 572 with a routledge or choke bore.  It is a smoothbore that has the the last 12 inches opened up to the diameter of close to a .410 shot gun.  Gunbroker has them from time to time, not cheap.
5/6/2015 9:56:59 PM EDT
[#5]
I have used a good bit of the CCI and some Winchester. Works pretty damn good on carpenter bees. I did get some lead build up in the barrel that took some work to get rid of but no permanent damage.
5/6/2015 9:58:24 PM EDT
[#6]
Also, I believe that marlin used to make a bolt action smooth bore. Called it a garden gun I think.
5/7/2015 11:09:14 AM EDT
[#7]
Quote History
Quoted:
Also, I believe that marlin used to make a bolt action smooth bore. Called it a garden gun I think.
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They did, but it was .22 WMR.
5/7/2015 11:49:22 AM EDT
[#8]
Quote History
Quoted:
Look for a remington 121 or 572 with a routledge or choke bore.  It is a smoothbore that has the the last 12 inches opened up to the diameter of close to a .410 shot gun.  Gunbroker has them from time to time, not cheap.
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Actually the Routledge bore is the opposite of a choke. :)  More like an old blunderbuss.

And yes, ridiculously expensive.  Only way to get an old smoothbore cheap is to look for "Single Shot .22, barrel shot out, missing rear sight." (older ones only had a bead front like a shotgun.)

Remington was the only one that did Routledge bores, and the original purpose was for the "Mos-Skeet-O" indoor shooting games. They changed back to straight smoothbores for the 580 series.
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