Interest
A shotgun (also known as a scattergun and peppergun, or historically as a fowling piece) is a firearm
that is usually designed to be fired from the shoulder, which uses the
energy of a fixed shell to fire a number of small spherical pellets
called shot, or a solid projectile called a slug. Shotguns come in a wide variety of sizes, ranging from 5.5 mm (.22 inch) bore up to 5 cm (2 inch) bore, and in a range of firearm operating mechanisms, including breech loading, single-barreled, double or combination gun, pump-action, bolt-, and lever-action, semi-automatic, and even fully automatic variants.
A shotgun is generally a smoothbore firearm, which means that the inside of the barrel is not rifled. Preceding smoothbore firearms, such as the musket, were widely used by armies in the 18th century. The direct ancestor to the shotgun, the blunderbuss, was also used in a similar variety of roles from self defence to riot control. It was often used by cavalry troops due to its generally shorter length and ease of use, as well as by coachmen for its substantial power. However, in the 19th century, these weapons were largely replaced on the battlefield with breechloading rifled firearms, which were more accurate over longer ranges. The military value of shotguns was rediscovered in the First World War, when American forces used 12-gauge pump action shotguns in close-quarters trench fighting to great effect. Since then, it has been used in a variety of roles in civilian, law enforcement, and military applications.
The shot pellets from a shotgun spread upon leaving the barrel, and
the power of the burning charge is divided among the pellets, which
means that the energy of any one ball of shot is fairly low. In a hunting context, this makes shotguns useful primarily for hunting birds and other small game. However, in a military or law enforcement context, the large number of projectiles makes the shotgun useful as a close quarters combat weapon or a defensive weapon. Shotguns are also used for target shooting sports such as skeet, trap, and sporting clays. These involve shooting clay disks, known as clay pigeons, thrown in various ways.
Characteristics
Shotguns come in a wide variety of forms, from very small up to massive punt guns,
and in nearly every type of firearm operating mechanism. The common
characteristics that make a shotgun unique center around the
requirements of firing shot. These features are the features typical of a
shotgun shell, namely a relatively short, wide cartridge, with straight walls, and operating at a relatively low pressure.
Ammunition
for shotguns is referred to in the USA as shotgun shells, shotshells,
or just shells (when it is not likely to be confused with artillery shells). The term cartridges is standard usage in the United Kingdom.
The shot is usually fired from a smoothbore barrel; another configuration is the rifled slug barrel, which fires more accurate solitary projectiles.
Uses
The typical use of a shotgun is against small and/or fast moving
targets, often taken while in the air. The spreading of the shot allows
the user to point the shotgun close to the target, rather than having to
aim precisely as in the case of a single projectile. The disadvantages
of shot are limited range and limited penetration of the shot, which is
why shotguns are used at short ranges, and typically against smaller
targets. Larger shot size, up to the extreme case of the single
projectile slug load, results in increased penetration, but at the
expense of fewer projectiles and lower probability of hitting the
target.
Aside from the most common use against small, fast moving targets,
the shotgun has several advantages when used against still targets.
First, it has enormous stopping power at short range, more than nearly all handguns
and many rifles. Though many believe the shotgun is a great firearm for
inexperienced shooters, the truth is, at close range, the spread of
shot is not very large at all, and competency in aiming is still
required. A typical self-defense load of buckshot contains 8-27 large lead pellets, resulting in many wound tracks in the target. Also, unlike a fully jacketed rifle bullet, each pellet of shot is less likely to penetrate walls and hit bystanders. It is favored by law enforcement for its low penetration and high stopping power.
On the other hand, the hit potential of a defensive shotgun is often overstated. The typical defensive
shot is taken at very close ranges, at which the shot charge expands no
more than a few centimeters. This means the shotgun must still be aimed
at the target with some care. Balancing this is the fact that shot
spreads further upon entering the target, and the multiple wound
channels of a defensive load are far more likely to produce a disabling
wound than a rifle or handgun.
Sporting
Some of the most common uses of shotguns are the sports of skeet shooting, trap shooting, and sporting clays.
These involve shooting clay discs, also known as clay pigeons, thrown
in various ways. Both skeet and trap competitions are featured at the Olympic Games. Skeet shooting usually deals with 25 shots, while sporting clays can be a course up to 100 shots.
Hunting
The shotgun is very popular for bird hunting,
it is also used for more general forms of hunting especially in
semi-populated areas where the range of the rifle bullet may pose a
hazard. Use of a smooth bore shotgun with a rifled slug or alternatively
a rifled barrel shotgun with a sabot
slug improves accuracy to 100 m (110 yards) or more. This is well
within the range of the majority of kill shots by experienced hunters
using shotguns.
However, given the relatively low muzzle velocity of slug ammunition
typically around 500 m/s (about 1600 feet per second) and blunt, poorly
streamlined shape of typical slugs (which cause them to lose velocity
very rapidly, compared to rifle bullets), a hunter must pay close
attention to the ballistics of the particular ammunition used to ensure an effective and humane kill shot.
At any reasonable range, shotgun slugs make effective lethal wounds
due to their tremendous mass, reducing the length of time that an animal
might suffer. For example, a typical 12 gauge shotgun slug is a blunt
piece of metal that could be described as a 18 mm (.729 inch) caliber
that weighs 28 grams (432 grains). For comparison, a common deer-hunting
rifle round is a 7.62 mm (.308 inch) slug weighing 9.7 grams (150
grains), but the dynamics of the rifle cartridge allow for a different
type of wound, and a much further reach.
Shotguns are often used with rifled barrels in locations where it is
not lawful to hunt with a rifle. Typically, a Sabot slug is used in
these barrels for maximum accuracy and performance. Shotguns are often
used to hunt whitetail deer in the thick brush and briers of the
Southeastern and upper Midwestern United States, where, due to the dense
cover, ranges tend to be very close - 25 m or less.
Sabot slugs are essentially very large hollowpoint bullets, and are
streamlined for maximum spin and accuracy when shot through a rifled
barrel. They have greater ranges than older Foster and Brenneke-type
slugs.
Law enforcement
In the US and Canada, shotguns are widely used as a support weapon by
police forces. One of the rationales for issuing shotguns is that even
without much training, an officer will probably be able to hit targets
at close to intermediate range, due to the "spreading" effect of
buckshot. This is mainly a myth, due to the already stated fact that the
spread of shotgun at 25 ft, averages 8 inches, being very capable of
missing a target. Some police forces are replacing shotguns in this role
with carbine rifles such as AR-15s. Shotguns are also used in roadblock situations, where police are blocking a highway to search cars for suspects. In the US, law enforcement agencies often use riot shotguns, especially for crowd and riot control where they may be loaded with less-lethal rounds such as rubber bullets or bean bags. Shotguns are also often used as breaching devices to defeat locks.
Military
Shotguns are common weapons in military use, particularly for special purposes: see combat shotgun.
Shotguns are found aboard Naval vessels for shipboard security, because
the weapon is very effective at close range as a way of repelling enemy
boarding parties. In a naval setting, stainless steel shotguns are often used, because regular steel is more prone to corrosion in the marine environment. Shotguns are also used by military police units. U.S. Marines have used shotguns since their inception at the squad level, often in the hands of NCOs, while the U.S. Army often issued them to a squad's point man. Shotguns were modified for and used in the trench warfare of WWI, in the jungle combat of WWII and Vietnam and are being used today in Iraq, being popular with soldiers and Marines in urban combat environments. Some U.S. units in Iraq use shotguns with special frangible breaching rounds to blow the locks off doors when they are making a surprise entry into a dwelling.
Home/personal defense
Where local laws permit possession and such use is legally sanctioned, pump-action and semi-automatic riot shotguns
in common law enforcement may also be available on the civilian market,
and such shotguns are a very popular means of home defense for many of
the same reasons they are preferred for close-quarters tasks in law
enforcement and the military.
Design features for various uses
Compared to handguns, shotguns are heavier, larger, and not as
maneuverable in close quarters (which also presents a greater retention
problem), but do have these advantages:
- They are generally much more powerful.
- The average shooter can engage multiple targets faster than with a handgun.
- They are generally perceived as more intimidating.
- On average, a quality pump-action shotgun is generally less expensive than a quality handgun (self-loading shotguns are generally more expensive than their pump-action counterparts).
- Shotguns are, in general, not as heavily regulated by legislation as handguns are.
- When loaded with smaller shot, a shotgun will not penetrate walls as readily as rifle and pistol rounds, making it safer for non-combatants when fired in or around populated structures. This comes at a price, however, as smaller shot may not penetrate deeply enough to cause an immediately incapacitating wound; those who recommend birdshot for minimizing wall penetration also suggest backing it up with a larger buckshot if the first shot fails to stop the threat.
Types
The wide range of forms the shotgun can take leads to some
significant differences between what is technically a shotgun and what
is legally considered a shotgun. A fairly broad attempt to define a
shotgun is made in the United States Code
(18 USC 921), which defines the shotgun as "a weapon designed or
redesigned, made or remade, and intended to be fired from the shoulder,
and designed or redesigned and made or remade to use the energy of the
explosive in a fixed shotgun shell to fire through a smooth bore either a
number of ball shot or a single projectile for each single pull of the
trigger."
A rifled slug,
with finned rifling designed to enable the projectile to be safely
fired through a choked barrel, is an example of a single projectile.
Some shotguns have rifled barrels and are designed to be used with a "saboted" bullet, one which is typically encased in a two-piece plastic ring (sabot) designed to peel away after it exits the barrel,
leaving the bullet, now spinning after passing through the rifled
barrel, to continue toward the target. These shotguns, although they
have rifled barrels, still use a shotgun-style shell instead of a rifle cartridge
and may in fact still fire regular multipellet shotgun shells, but the
rifling in the barrel will affect the shot pattern. The use of a rifled
barrel blurs the distinction between rifle and shotgun, and in fact the
early rifled shotgun barrels went by the name Paradox for just that reason. Hunting laws may differentiate between smooth barreled and rifled barreled guns.
Also, many people would likely call a fully automatic shotgun a shotgun, even though legally it would fall into a different category.
Amongst the general populace, any gun that fires shotgun shells could
be considered a shotgun. This might include the rare shot-pistol (a
pistol designed to fire a standard shotgun shell).
Riot gun has long been a synonym
for a shotgun, especially a short-barrelled shotgun. During the 19th
and early 20th century, these were used to disperse rioters and
revolutionaries. The wide spray of the shot
ensured a large group would be hit, but the light shot would ensure
more wounds than fatalities. When the ground was paved, police officers
would often ricochet
the shot off the ground, slowing down the shot and spreading pattern
even further. To this day specialized police and defensive shotguns are
called riot shotguns. The introduction of rubber bullets and bean bag rounds ended the practice of using shot for the most part, but riot shotguns are still used to fire a variety of less lethal rounds for riot control.
A sawed-off shotgun
(or "sawn-off") refers to a shotgun whose barrel has been shortened,
leaving it more maneuverable, easier to use at short range and more
readily concealed. Many countries establish a legal minimum barrel
length that precludes easy concealment (this length is 18" (457 mm) in
the U.S.). The sawed-off shotgun is sometimes known as a "Lupara" (in Italian a generic reference to the word "Lupo" ("Wolf")) in Southern Italy and Sicily.
Coach guns
are similar to sawn-off shotguns, except they are manufactured with an
46 cm (18") barrel and are legal for civilian ownership in some
jurisdictions. Coach guns are also more commonly associated with the
American Old West or Australian Colonial period, and often used for
hunting in bush, scrub, or marshland where a longer barrel would be
unwieldy or impractical.
A backpacker shotgun has a short barrel and either a full-size
stock or pistol grip, depending on legislation in intended markets. The
overall length of these weapons is frequently less than 90 cm
(36 inches), with some measuring up at less than 63 cm (25 inches).
These weapons are typically break-action .410 "gauge" (caliber),
single-barrel designs with no magazine and no automatic ejection
capability. They typically employ a cylinder bore, but infrequently are
available in modified choke as well.
Backpacker shotguns are popular for "home defense" purposes and as
"survival" weapons. Other examples include a variety of .410 / rifle
"survival" guns manufactured in over/under designs. In the drilling
arrangement, a rimfire or centrefire rifle barrel is located beneath
the barrel of a .410 gauge shotgun. Generally, there is one manually
cocked external hammer and an external selection lever to select which
caliber of cartridge to fire. A notable example is the Springfield Armory M6 Scout,
a .410 / .22 issued to United States Air Force personnel as a
"survival" gun in the event of a forced landing or accident in a
wilderness area. Variants have been used by Israeli, Canadian, and
American armed forces. Shotgun/rifle combination guns
with two, three, and occasionally even four barrels are available from a
number of makers, primarily European. These provided flexibility,
enabling the hunter to effectively shoot at flushing birds or more
distant small mammals while only carrying one gun.
History
Since early firearms, such as the blunderbuss, arquebus and musket
tended to have large diameter, smoothbore barrels, they would function
with shot as well as solid balls. A firearm intended for use in wing
shooting of birds was known as a fowling piece. The 1728 Cyclopaedia defines a fowling piece as:
- Fowling Piece, a portable Fire Arm for the shooting of Birds. See Fire Arm.
- Of Fowling Pieces, those are reputed the best, which have the longest Barrel, vis. from 5⁄2 foot to 6; with an indifferent Bore, under Harquebus: Tho' for different Occasions they shou'd be of different Sorts, and Sizes. But in all, 'tis essential the Barrel be well polish'd and smooth within; and the Bore all of a Bigness, from one End to another...
For example, the contemporary Brown Bess musket,
in service with the British military from 1722 to 1838, 19 mm
(.75 inch) smoothbore barrel, roughly the same as a 10 gauge shotgun,
and was 157 cm (62 inches) long, just short of the above recommended
168 cm (5⁄2 feet). On the other hand, records from the Plymouth colony show a maximum length of 137 cm (4⁄2 feet) for fowling pieces, shorter than the typical musket.
Shot was also used in warfare; the buck and ball
loading, mixing a musket ball with three or six buckshot, was used
throughout the history of the smoothbore musket. The first recorded use
of the term shotgun was in 1776 in Kentucky. It was noted as part of the "frontier language of the West" by James Fenimore Cooper.
With the adoption of the smaller bores and rifled barrels, the
shotgun began to emerge as a separate entity. Shotguns have long been
the preferred method for sport hunting of birds, and the largest
shotguns, the punt guns, were used for commercial hunting. The double-barreled shotgun, for example, has changed little since the development of the boxlock
action in 1875. Modern innovations such as interchangeable chokes and
subgauge inserts make the double barreled shotgun the shotgun of choice
in skeet, trap shooting, and sporting clays, as well as with many hunters. A double from a well-respected maker, such as Krieghoff or Perazzi, can cost US$5,000 to start, and reach prices of US$100,000 for presentation grade examples.
During its long history, it has been favored by bird hunters, guards and law enforcement officials. The shotgun has fallen in and out of favor with military
forces several times in its long history. Shotguns and similar weapons
are simpler than long-range rifles, and were developed earlier. The
development of more accurate and deadlier long-range rifles minimized
the usefulness of the shotgun on the open battlefields of European wars.
But armies have "rediscovered" the shotgun for specialty uses many
times.
19th century
During the 19th century, shotguns were mainly employed by cavalry units. Both sides of the American Civil War employed shotguns. American cavalry went on to use the shotgun extensively during the Indian Wars
throughout the latter half of the 19th century. Mounted units favored
the shotgun for its moving target effectiveness, and devastating
close-range firepower. The shotgun was also favored by citizen militias
and similar groups. The shotgun was used in the defense of the Alamo during Texas' War of Independence with Mexico.
With the exception of cavalry units, the shotgun saw less and less
use throughout the 19th century on the battlefield. As a defense weapon
it remained popular with guards and lawmen, however, and the shotgun
became one of many symbols of the American Old West. The famous lawman Cody Lyons killed two men with a shotgun; his friend Doc Holliday's
only confirmed kill was with a shotgun. The weapon both these men used
was the short-barreled version favored by private strongbox guards on
stages and trains. These guards, called express messengers, became known
as shotgun messengers,
since they rode with the weapon (loaded with buckshot) for defense
against bandits. Passenger carriages carrying a strongbox usually had at
least one private guard armed with a shotgun riding in front of the
coach, next to the driver. This practice has survived in American slang; the term "riding shotgun"
is used for the passenger who sits in the front passenger seat. The
shotgun was a popular weapon for personal protection in the American Old West, requiring less skill on the part of the user than a revolver.
Hammerless shotguns
The origins of the hammerless shotgun are European but otherwise
obscure. The earliest breechloading shotguns originated in France and
Belgium in the early 19th century (see also the history of the Pinfire)
and a number of them such as those by Robert and Chateauvillard from
the 1830s and 1840s did not use hammers. In fact during these decades a
wide variety of ingenious weapons, including rifles, adopted what is now
often known as a ‘needle-fire’ method of igniting the charge, where a
firing pin or a longer sharper needle provided the necessary impact. The
most widely used British hammerless needle-fire shotgun was the unusual
hinged-chamber fixed-barrel breech-loader by Joseph Needham, produced
from the 1850s. By the 1860s hammerless guns were increasingly used in
Europe both in war and sport although hammer guns were still very much
in the majority. The first significant encroachment on hammer guns was a
hammerless patent which could be used with a conventional side-lock.
This was British gunmaker T Murcott’s 1871 action nicknamed the
‘mousetrap’ on account of its loud snap action. However the most
successful hammerless innovation of the 1870s was Anson and Deeley’s boxlock
patent of 1875. This simple but ingenious design only used four moving
parts allowing the production of cheaper and reliable shotguns.
Daniel Myron LeFever
Daniel Myron LeFever
is credited with the invention of the American hammerless shotgun.
Working for Barber & LeFever in Syracuse, N.Y. he introduced his
first hammerless shotgun in 1878. This gun was cocked with external
cocking levers on the side of the breech. He formed his own company, The
LeFever Arms Co., in 1880 and went on to patent the first truly
automatic hammerless shotgun in 1883. This gun automatically cocked
itself when the breech was closed. He later developed the mechanism to
automatically eject the shells when the breech was opened. The LeFever
Arms Co. went on to make some of the finest double barrel shotguns in
America until they were bought by The Ithaca Gun Co. in 1916.
John Moses Browning
One of the men most responsible for the modern development of the shotgun was prolific gun designer John Browning. While working for Winchester Firearms, Browning revolutionized shotgun design. In 1887, Browning introduced the Model 1887 Lever Action Repeating Shotgun,
which loaded a fresh cartridge from its internal magazine by the
operation of the action lever. Before this time most shotguns were the 'break open' type.
This development was greatly overshadowed by two further innovations
he introduced at the end of the 19th century. In 1893, Browning produced
the Model 1893 Pump Action Shotgun, introducing the now familiar pump
action to the market. And in 1900, he patented the Browning Auto-5, the world's first semi-automatic shotgun. The Browning Auto-5 remained in production until 1998.
World wars
The decline in military use of shotguns reversed in World War I. American forces under General Pershing employed 12-gauge pump action shotguns when they were deployed to the Western front in 1917. These shotguns were fitted with bayonets
and a heat shield so the barrel could be gripped while the bayonet was
deployed. Shotguns fitted in this fashion became known as trench guns by the United States Army. Those without such modifications were known as riot guns. After World War I, the United States military began referring to all shotguns as riot guns.
Due to the cramped conditions of trench warfare, the American shotguns were extremely effective. Germany even filed an official diplomatic protest against their use, alleging they violated the laws of warfare. The Judge Advocate General
reviewed the protest, and it was rejected because the Germans protested
use of lead shot (which would have been illegal) but military shot was
plated. This is the only occasion the legality of the shotgun's use in
warfare has been questioned.
During World War II,
the shotgun was not heavily used in the war in Europe by official
military forces. However, the shotgun was a favorite weapon of
Allied-supported partisans, such as the French Resistance. By contrast, in the Pacific theater, thick jungles and heavily fortified positions made the shotgun a favorite weapon of the United States Marines.
Marines tended to use pump shotguns, since the pump action was less
likely to jam in the humid and dirty conditions of the Pacific campaign.
Similarly, the United States Navy used pump shotguns to guard ships when in port in Chinese harbors (e.g., Shanghai). The United States Army Air Forces
also used pump shotguns to guard bombers and other aircraft against
saboteurs when parked on airbases across the Pacific and on the West
Coast of the United States. Pump and semi-automatic shotguns were used
in marksmanship training, particularly for bomber gunners. The most
common pump shotguns used for these duties were the 12 gauge Winchester Model 97 and Model 12. The break-open action, single barrel shotgun was used by the British Home Guard
and U.S. home security forces. Notably, industrial centers (such as the
Gopher State Steel Works) were guarded by National Guard soldiers with Winchester Model 37 12 gauge shotguns.
Late 20th century to present
Since the end of World War II, the shotgun has remained a specialty
weapon for modern armies. It has been deployed for specialized tasks
where its strengths were put to particularly good use. It was used to
defend machine gun emplacements during the Korean War, American and French jungle patrols used shotguns during the Vietnam War, and shotguns saw extensive use as door breaching and close quarter weapons in the early stages of the Iraq War, and saw limited use in tank crews. Many modern navies
make extensive use of shotguns by personnel engaged in boarding hostile
ships, as any shots fired will almost certainly be over a short range.
Nonetheless, shotguns are far less common in military use than rifles, carbines, submachineguns, or pistols.
On the other hand, the shotgun has become a standard in law
enforcement use. A variety of specialty less-lethal or non-lethal
ammunitions, such as tear gas shells, bean bags, flares, explosive sonic
stun rounds, and rubber projectiles, all packaged into 12 gauge shotgun
shells, are produced specifically for the law enforcement market.
Recently, Taser International introduced a self-contained electronic weapon which is fired from a standard 12 gauge shotgun.
The shotgun remains a standard firearm for hunting throughout the
world for all sorts of game from birds and small game to large game such
as deer. The versatility of the shotgun as a hunting weapon has
steadily increased as slug rounds and more advanced rifled barrels have
given shotguns longer range and higher killing power. The shotgun has
become a ubiquitous firearm in the hunting community.
In 1994, shotguns made up 9.7% of gun traces relating to criminal
investigations in the United States and were the weapon of choice in 5%
of homicides according to United States Justice Department statistics.
Shotguns are not the preferred weapons for criminal activity, since
criminals prefer weapons which are more easily concealed, according to
the National Crime Victimization Survey. However, the comparatively easy
availability of double-barrelled shotguns compared to pistols in the United Kingdom and Australia, coupled with the ease with which their barrels and stocks can be shortened, has made the sawn-off shotgun a popular weapon of armed robbers in these countries.
Design factors
Action
Action is the term for the operating mechanism of a gun. There are
many types of shotguns, typically categorized by the number of barrels
or the way the gun is reloaded.
Break-action
For most of the history of the shotgun, the break-action breech loading double
was the most common type, typically divided into two subtypes: the
traditional "side by side" shotgun features two barrels mounted one
beside the other (as the name suggests), whereas the "over and under"
shotgun has the two barrels mounted one on top of the other. Side by
side shotguns were traditionally used for hunting and other sporting
pursuits (early long barreled side-by side shotguns were known as Fowling Pieces
for their use hunting ducks and other birds), whereas over and under
shotguns are more commonly associated with sporting use (such as clay
pigeon/skeet shooting). Both types of double-barrel shotgun are used for
hunting and sporting use, with the individual configuration largely
being a matter of personal preference.
Another, less commonly encountered type of break-action shotgun is the combination gun,
which is an over and under design with one shotgun barrel and one rifle
barrel (more often rifle on top, but rifle on bottom was not uncommon).
There is also a class of break action guns called drillings,
which contain three barrels, usually 2 shotgun barrels of the same gauge
and a rifle barrel, though the only common theme is that at least one
barrel be a shotgun barrel. The most common arrangement was essentially a
side by side shotgun with the rifle barrel below and centered. Usually a
drilling containing more than one rifle barrel would have both rifle
barrels in the same caliber, but examples do exist with different caliber barrels, usually a .22 Long Rifle and a centerfire cartridge. Although very rare, drillings with three and even four (a vierling) shotgun barrels were made.
Pump-action
In pump-action shotguns, a sliding forearm handle (the pump)
works the action, extracting the spent shell and inserting a new one
while cocking the hammer or striker as the pump is worked. A pump gun is
typically fed from a tubular magazine underneath the barrel, which also
serves as a guide for the pump. The rounds are fed in one by one
through a port in the receiver, where they are lifted by a lever called
the elevator and pushed forward into the chamber by the bolt. A
pair of latches at the rear of the magazine hold the rounds in place and
facilitate feeding of one shell at a time. If it is desired to load the
gun fully, a round may be loaded through the ejection port directly
into the chamber, or cycled from the magazine, which is then topped off
with another round. Well-known examples include the Winchester Model 1897, Remington 870 and Mossberg 500/590.
Pump-action shotguns are common hunting, fowling and sporting
shotguns. Hunting models generally have a barrel between 600 and 700 mm
(24"-28"). Tube-fed models designed for hunting often come with a dowel
rod or other stop that is inserted into the magazine and reduces the
capacity of the gun to three shells (two in the magazine and one
chambered) as is mandated by U.S. federal law when hunting migratory
birds. They can also easily be used with an empty magazine as a
single-shot weapon, by simply dropping the next round to be fired into
the open ejection port after the spent round is ejected. For this
reason, pump-actions are commonly used to teach novice shooters under
supervision, as the trainer can load each round more quickly than with a
break-action, while unlike a break-action the student can maintain his
grip on the gun and concentrate on proper handling and firing of the
weapon.
Pump action shotguns with shorter barrels and no barrel choke (or
very little) are highly popular for use in home defense, military and
law enforcement, and are commonly known as riot guns.
The minimum barrel length for shotguns in most of the U.S. is 18"
(457 mm), and this barrel length (sometimes 18.5"-20" (470–500 mm) to
increase magazine capacity and/or ensure the gun is legal regardless of
measuring differences) is the primary choice for riot shotguns. The
shorter barrel makes the weapon easier to maneuver around corners and in
tight spaces, though slightly longer barrels are sometimes used
outdoors for a tighter spread pattern or increased accuracy of slug
projectiles. Home-defense/law enforcement shotguns are usually chambered
for 12-gauge shells, providing maximum shot power and the use of a
variety of projectiles such as buckshot, rubber, sandbag and slug
shells, but 20-gauge (common in bird-hunting shotguns) or .410 (common
in youth-size shotguns) are also available in defense-type shotgun
models allowing easier use by novice shooters.
A riot shotgun has many advantages over a handgun or rifle. Compared to "defense-caliber" handguns (chambered for 9mm Parabellum, .38 Special, .357 Magnum, .40 S&W, .45 ACP and similar), a shotgun has far more power and damage potential (up to 10 times the muzzle energy of a .45 ACP cartridge), allowing a "one-shot stop"
that is more difficult to achieve with typical handgun loads. Compared
to a rifle, riot shotguns are easier to maneuver due to the shorter
barrel, still provide better damage potential at indoor distances
(generally 3–5 meters/yards), and reduce the risk of "overpenetration";
that is, the bullet or shot passing completely through the target and
continuing beyond, which poses a risk to those behind the target through
walls. The wide spread of the shot reduces the importance of shot
placement compared to a single projectile, which increases the
effectiveness of "point shooting" - rapidly aiming simply by pointing
the weapon in the direction of the target. This allows easy, fast use by
novices.
Lever-action
Early attempts at repeating shotguns invariably centred around either bolt-or lever-action
designs, drawing inspiration from contemporary repeating rifles, with
the earliest successful repeating shotgun being the lever-action Winchester M1887, designed by John Browning at the behest of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company.
Lever shotguns, while less common, were popular in the late 19th
century with the Winchester Model 1887 and Model 1901 being prime
examples. Initially very popular, demand waned after the introduction of
pump-action shotguns around the start of the 20th century, and
production was eventually discontinued in 1920.
One major issue with lever-actions (and to a lesser extent
pump-actions) was that early shotgun shells were often made of paper or
similar fragile materials (modern hulls are plastic or metal). As a
result the loading of shells, or working of the action of the shotgun,
could often result in cartridges getting crushed and becoming unusable,
or even damaging the gun.
Lever shotguns have seen a return to the gun market in recent years,
however, with Winchester producing the Model 9410 (chambering the .410
gauge shotgun shell and using the action of the Winchester Model 94
series lever-action rifle, hence the name), and a handful of other
firearm manufacturers (primarily Norinco of China and ADI Ltd. of Australia) producing versions of the Winchester Model 1887/1901 designed for modern 12-gauge smokeless
shotshells with more durable plastic casings. There has been a notable
uptick in lever-action shotgun sales in Australia since 1997, when
pump-actions were effectively outlawed.
Semi-automatic
Gas, inertia, or recoil operated actions are other popular methods of
increasing the rate of fire of a shotgun; these are generally referred
to as autoloaders
or semi-automatics. Instead of having the action manually operated by a
pump or lever, the action automatically cycles each time the shotgun is
fired, ejecting the spent shell and reloading a fresh one into the
chamber. The first successful semi-automatic shotgun was John Browning's Auto-5, first produced by Fabrique Nationale beginning in 1902. Other well-known examples include the Remington 1100, Benelli M1, and Saiga-12.
Some, such as the Franchi SPAS-12 and Benelli M3,
are capable of switching between semi-automatic and pump action. These
are popular for two reasons; first, some jurisdictions forbid the use of
semi-automatic actions for hunting, and second, lower-powered rounds,
like "reduced-recoil" buckshot shells and many less lethal cartridges, have insufficient power to reliably cycle a semi-automatic shotgun.
Bolt-action
Bolt-action
shotguns, while uncommon, do exist. One of the best known examples is a
12 gauge manufactured by Mossberg featuring a 3-round magazine,
marketed in Australia just after changes to the gun laws in 1997 heavily
restricted the ownership and use of pump-action and semi-automatic
shotguns. They were not a huge success, as they were somewhat slow and
awkward to operate, and the rate of fire was noticeably slower (on
average) than a double-barrelled gun. The Ishapore Arsenal in India also manufactured a single-shot .410 bore shotgun based on the SMLE Mk III*
rifle. The Russian Berdana shotgun was effectively a single-shot
bolt-action rifle that became obsolete, and was subsequently modified to
chamber 16 gauge shotgun shells for civilian sale. The U.S. military M26
is also a bolt action weapon. Bolt-action shotguns have also been used
in the "goose gun" application, intended to kill birds such as geese
at greater range. Typically, goose guns have long barrels (up to
36 inches), and small bolt-fed magazines. Bolt-action shotguns are also
used in conjunction with slug shells for the maximum possible accuracy
from a shotgun.
Other
In addition to the commonly encountered shotgun actions already listed, there are also shotguns based on the Martini-Henry rifle design, originally designed by British arms maker W.W. Greener.
Some of the more interesting advances in shotgun technology include the versatile NeoStead 2000 and fully automatics such as the Pancor Jackhammer or Auto-Assault 12.
In 1925, Rodolfo Cosmi produced the first working hybrid prototype
semi-automatic shotgun, which had an 8 round magazine located in the
stock. While it reloaded automatically after each shot like a
semi-automatic, it had a break-action to load the first shell. This
design has only been repeated once, by Beretta with their UGB25
automatic shotgun. The user loads the first shell by breaking the gun in
the manner of a break-action shotgun, then closes it and inserts the
second shell into a clip on the gun's right side. The spent hulls are
ejected downwards. The guns combine the advantages of the break action
(they can be proven to be safe by breaking open, there are no flying
hulls) with those of the semi-automatic (low recoil, low barrel axis
position hence low muzzle flip).
Gauge
Main article: Gauge (bore diameter)
The caliber of shotguns is measured in terms of gauge (U.S.) or bore (U.K.).
The gauge number is determined by the weight, in fractions of a pound,
of a solid sphere of lead with a diameter equal to the inside diameter
of the barrel. So, a 10 gauge shotgun nominally should have an inside
diameter equal to that of a sphere made from one-tenth of a pound of
lead. By far the most common gauges are 12 (0.729 in, 18.5 mm diameter)
and 20 (0.614 in, 15.6 mm), although .410 (= 67), 32, 28, 24, 16, and 10
(19.7 mm) gauge and 9 mm (.355 in.) and .22 (5.5 mm) rimfire
calibres have also been produced. Larger gauges, too powerful to
shoulder, have been built but were generally affixed to small boats and
referred to as punt guns. These were used for commercial water fowl hunting, to kill large numbers of birds resting on the water. Although relatively rare, single and double derringers
have also been produced that are capable of firing either .45 (Long)
Colt or .410 shotgun shells from the same chamber; they are commonly
known as 'snake guns', and are popular among some outdoorsmen in the
South and Southwest regions of the United States. There are also some
revolvers, such as the Taurus Judge, that are capable of shooting the
.45LC/.410 rounds; but as with derringers, these are handguns that shoot
.410 shotgun shells, and are not necessarily considered shotguns.
The .410 bore
(10.4 mm) is unusual, being measured in inches, and would be
approximately 67 "real" gauge, though its short hull versions are
nominally called 36 gauge in Europe. It uses a relatively small charge
of shot. It is used for hunting and for skeet. Because of its very light
recoil (approx 10 N), it is often used as a beginners gun. However, the
small charge and typically tight choke make it more difficult to hit
targets. It is also frequently used by expert shooters because of the
difficulty, especially in expensive side by side and over/under models
for hunting small bird game such as quail and doves. Inexpensive
bolt-action .410 shotguns are a very common first hunting shotgun among
young pre-teen hunters, as they are used mostly for hunting squirrels,
while additionally teaching bolt-action manipulation skills that will
transfer easily later to adult-sized hunting rifles. Most of these young
hunters move up to a 20-gauge
within a few years, and to 12 gauge shotguns and full-size hunting
rifles by their late teens. Still, many who are particularly
recoil-averse choose to stay with 20-gauge shotguns all their adult
life, as it is a very suitable gauge for many popular hunting uses.
A recent innovation is the back-boring of barrels, in which the
barrels are bored out slightly larger than their actual gauge. This
reduces the compression forces on the shot when it transitions from the
chamber to the barrel. This leads to a slight reduction in perceived
recoil, and an improvement in shot pattern due to reduced deformation of
the shot.
Shot
Most shotguns are used to fire "a number of ball shot", in addition
to slugs and sabots. The ball shot or pellets is for the most part made
of lead but this has been partially replaced by bismuth, steel,
tungsten-iron, tungsten-nickel-iron and even tungsten polymer loads.
Non-toxic loads are required by Federal law for waterfowl hunting
in the US, as the shot may be ingested by the waterfowl, which some
authorities believe can lead to health problems due to the lead
exposure. Shot is termed either birdshot or buckshot
depending on the shot size. Informally, birdshot pellets have a
diameter smaller than 5 mm (0.20 inches) and buckshot are larger than
that. Pellet size is indicated by a number, for bird shot this ranges
from the smallest 12 (1.2 mm, 0.05 in) to 2 (3.8 mm, 0.15 in) and then
BB (4.6 mm, 0.18 in).
For buckshot the numbers usually start at 4 (6.1 mm, 0.24 in) and go
down to 1, 0, 00 ("double ought"), 000, and finally 0000 (9.7 mm, .38
in). A different informal distinction is that "bird shot" pellets are
small enough that they can be measured into the cartridge by weight, and
simply poured in, whereas "buckshot" pellets are so large they must be
stacked inside the cartridge in a fixed geometric arrangement in order
to fit. The diameter in hundredths of an inch of bird shot sizes from #9
to #1 can be obtained by subtracting the shot size from 17. Thus, #4
bird shot is 17 - 4 = 13 = 0.13 inches (3.3 mm) in diameter. Different
terminology is used outside the United States. In England and Australia, for example, 00 buckshot cartridges are commonly referred to as "S.G." (small game) cartridges.
Size | Diameter | Pellets/10 g Lead | Pellets/10 g Steel |
---|---|---|---|
FF | 5.84 mm (.230") | 8 | 12 |
F | 5.59 mm (.220") | 10 | 14 |
TT | 5.33 mm (.210") | 11 | 16 |
T | 5.08 mm (.200") | 13 | 19 |
BBB | 4.83 mm (.190") | 15 | 22 |
BB | 4.57 mm (.180") | 18 | 25 |
B | 4.32 mm (.170") | 21 | 30 |
1 | 4.06 mm (.160") | 25 | 36 |
2 | 3.81 mm (.150") | 30 | 44 |
3 | 3.56 mm (.140") | 37 | 54 |
4 | 3.30 mm (.130") | 47 | 68 |
5 | 3.05 mm (.120") | 59 | 86 |
6 | 2.79 mm (.110") | 78 | 112 |
7 | 2.41 mm (.100") | 120 | 174 |
8 | 2.29 mm (.090") | 140 | 202 |
9 | 2.03 mm (.080") | 201 | 290 |
Size | Diameter | Pellets/10 g Lead |
---|---|---|
000 or LG ("triple-ought") | 9.1 mm (.36") | 2.2 |
00 or SG ("double-ought") | 8.4 mm (.33") | 2.9 |
0("one-ought") | 8.1 mm (.32") | 3.1 |
1 | 7.6 mm (.30") | 3.8 |
2 or SSG | 6.9 mm (.27") | 5.2 |
3 | 6.4 mm (.25") | 6.6 |
4 | 6.1 mm (.24") | 7.4 |
Pattern and choke
Shot, small and round and delivered without spin, is ballistically
inefficient. As the shot leaves the barrel it begins to disperse in the
air. The resulting cloud of pellets is known as the shot pattern, or shotgun shot spread.
The ideal pattern would be a circle with an even distribution of shot
throughout, with a density sufficient to ensure enough pellets will
intersect the target to achieve the desired result, such as a kill when
hunting or a break when shooting clay targets. In reality the pattern is
closer to a Gaussian,
or normal distribution, with a higher density in the center that tapers
off at the edges. Patterns are usually measured by firing at a 30 inch
(76 cm) diameter circle on a large sheet of paper placed at varying
distances. The hits inside the circle are counted, and compared to the
total number of pellets, and the density of the pattern inside the
circle is examined. An "ideal" pattern would put nearly 100% of the
pellets in the circle and would have no voids—any region where a target
silhouette will fit and not cover 3 or more holes is considered a
potential problem.
A constriction in the end of the barrel known as the choke is used to
tailor the pattern for different purposes. Chokes may either be formed
as part of the barrel at the time of manufacture, by squeezing the end
of the bore down over a mandrel,
or by threading the barrel and screwing in an interchangeable choke
tube. The choke typically consists of a conical section that smoothly
tapers from the bore diameter down to the choke diameter, followed by a
cylindrical section of the choke diameter. Briley Manufacturing, a maker
of interchangeable shotgun chokes, uses a conical portion about 3 times
the bore diameter in length, so the shot is gradually squeezed down
with minimal deformation. The cylindrical section is shorter, usually
0.6 to 0.75 inches (15 to 19 mm). The use of interchangeable chokes has
made it easy to tune the performance of a given combination of shotgun
and shotshell to achieve the desired performance.
The choke should be tailored to the range and size of the targets. A
skeet shooter, shooting at close targets might use 127 micrometres
(0.005 inches) of constriction to produce a 76 cm (30 inch) diameter
pattern at a distance of 19 m (21 yards). A trap
shooter, shooting at distant targets might use 762 micrometres
(0.030 inches) of constriction to produce a 76 cm (30 inch) diameter
pattern at 37 m (40 yards). Special chokes for turkey hunting, which
requires long range shots at the small head and neck of the bird, can go
as high as 1500 micrometres (0.060 inches). The use of too much choke
and a small pattern increases the difficulty of hitting the target, the
use of too little choke produces large patterns with insufficient pellet
density to reliably break targets or kill game. "Cylinder barrels" have
no constriction. See also: Slug barrel
Constriction (micrometres) |
Constriction (inches) |
American Name | percentage of shot in a 76 cm (30 in) circle at 37 m (40 yd) |
Total spread at 37 m (cm) |
Total spread at 40 yds (in) |
Effective range (m) |
Effective range (yd) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | .000 | Cylinder | 40 | 150 | 59 | 18 | 20 |
127 | .005 | Skeet | 45 | 132 | 52 | 21 | 23 |
254 | .010 | Improved Cylinder | 50 | 124 | 49 | 23 | 25 |
381 | .015 | Light Modified | |||||
508 | .020 | Modified | 60 | 117 | 46 | 32 | 35 |
635 | .025 | Improved Modified | |||||
762 | .030 | Light Full | 109 | 43 | |||
889 | .035 | Full | 70 | 37 | 40 | ||
1143 | .045 | Extra Full | |||||
1270 | .050 | Super Full |
Other specialized choke tubes exist as well. Some turkey hunting
tubes have constrictions greater than "Super Full", or additional
features like porting to reduce recoil, or "straight rifling" that is
designed to stop any spin that the shot column might acquire when
traveling down the barrel. These tubes are often extended tubes, meaning
they project beyond the end of the bore, giving more room for things
like a longer conical section. Shot spreaders or diffusion chokes work
opposite of normal chokes—they are designed to spread the shot more than
a cylinder bore, generating wider patterns for very short range use. A
number of recent spreader chokes, such as the Briley "Diffusion" line,
actually use rifling in the choke to spin the shot slightly, creating a
wider spread. The Briley Diffusion uses a 1 in 36 cm twist, as does the
FABARM Lion Paradox shotgun.
Oval chokes, which are designed to provide a shot pattern wider than it is tall, are sometimes found on combat shotguns, primarily those of the Vietnam War
era. They were available for aftermarket addition in the 1970s from
companies like A & W Engineering. Military versions of the Ithaca 37
with duckbill choke were used in limited numbers during the
Vietnam War by US Navy Seals. It arguably increased effectiveness in
close range engagements against multiple targets. Two major
disadvantages plagued the system. One was erratic patterning. The second
was that the shot would spread too quickly providing a very limited
effective zone.
Offset chokes, where the pattern is intentionally slightly off of
center, are used to change the point of impact. For instance, an offset
choke can be used to make a double barrelled shotgun with poorly aligned
barrels hit the same spot with both barrels.
Barrel length
Shotguns generally have longer barrels than modern rifles. Unlike
rifles, however, the long shotgun barrel is not for ballistic purposes;
shotgun shells use small powder charges in large diameter bores, and
this leads to very low muzzle pressures (see internal ballistics)
and very little velocity change with increasing barrel length.
According to Remington, modern powder in a shotgun burns completely in
25 to 36 cm barrels.
Since shotguns are generally used for shooting at small, fast moving targets, it is important to lead
the target by firing slightly ahead of the target, so that when the
shot reaches the range of the target, the target will have moved into
the pattern. On uphill shooting, this means to shoot above the target. Conversely, on downhill shooting, this means to shoot below
the target, which is somewhat counterintuitive for many beginning
hunters. Of course, depending on the barrel length, the amount of lead employed will vary for different barrel lengths, and must be learned by experience.
Shotguns made for close ranges, where the angular speed of the
targets is great (such as skeet or upland bird hunting) tend to have
shorter barrels, around 24 to 28 inches (610 to 710 mm). Shotguns for
longer range shooting, where angular speeds are less (trap shooting;
quail, pheasant, and waterfowl hunting) tend to have longer barrels, 28
to 34 inches (860 mm). The longer barrels have more inertia,
and will therefore swing more slowly but more steadily. The short, low
inertia barrels swing faster, but are less steady. These lengths are for
pump or semi-auto shotguns; break open guns have shorter overall
lengths for the same barrel length, and so will use longer barrels. The
break open design saves between 9 and 15 cm (3.5 and 6 inches) in
overall length, but in most cases pays for this by having two barrels,
which adds weight at the muzzle, and so usually only adds a couple of
centimetres. Barrels for shotguns have been getting longer as modern
steels and production methods make the barrels stronger and lighter; a
longer, lighter barrel gives the same inertia for less overall weight.
Shotguns for use against larger, slower targets generally have even
shorter barrels. Small game shotguns, for hunting game like rabbits and
squirrels, or shotguns for use with buckshot for deer, are often 56 to
61 cm (22 to 24 inches).
Shotguns intended for all-round hunting are a compromise, of course,
but a 72 to 74 cm (28-29 inch) barrel pump-action 12-gauge shotgun with a
modified choke can serve admirably for use as one-gun intended for
general all-round hunting of small-game such as quails, rabbits,
pheasants, doves, and squirrels in semi-open wooded or farmland areas in
many parts of the eastern US (Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee) where dense
brush is less of a hindrance and the ability to have more reach is
important. For hunting in dense brush, shorter barrel lengths are often
preferred when hunting the same types of game.
Ammunition
Main article: Shotgun shell
The extremely large caliber of shotgun shells has led to a wide variety of different ammunition.
Shotshells are the most commonly used round, filled with lead or lead substitute pellets.
Of this general class, the most common subset is birdshot,
which uses a large number (from dozens to hundreds) of small pellets,
meant to create a wide "kill spread" to hunt birds in flight. Shot
shells are described by the size and number of the pellets within, and
numbered in reverse order (the smaller the number, the bigger the pellet
size, similar to bore gauge). Size nine (#9) shot is the smallest size
normally used for hunting and is used on small upland game birds such as dove and quail. Larger sizes are used for hunting larger upland game birds and waterfowl.
Buckshot
is similar to but larger than birdshot, and was originally designed for
hunting larger game, such as deer (hence the name). While the advent of
new, more accurate slug technologies is making buckshot less attractive
for hunting, it is still the most common choice for police, military,
and home defense
uses. Like birdshot, buckshot is described by pellet size, with larger
numbers indicating smaller shot. From the smallest to the largest,
buckshot sizes are: #4, (called "number four"), #1, 0 ("one-ought"), 00
("double-ought"), 000 ("triple-ought") and 0000 ("four-ought"). A typical round for defensive use would be a 12 gauge 2⁄4" (7 cm) length 00 buck shell, which contains 9 pellets roughly 8.4 mm (.33 inch) in diameter, each comparable to a .38 Special
bullet in damage potential. New "tactical" buckshot rounds, designed
specifically for defensive use, use slightly fewer shot at lower
velocity to reduce recoil and increase controllability of the shotgun.
There are some shotgun rounds designed specifically for police use that
shoot effectively from 50 yards (46 m) with a 20" diameter grouping of
the balls.
Slug
rounds are rounds that fire a single solid slug. They are used for
hunting large game, and in certain military and law enforcement
applications. Modern slugs are moderately accurate, especially when
fired from special rifled slug barrels. They are often used in
"shotgun-only" hunting zones near inhabited areas, where rifles are
prohibited due to their greater range.
Sabots are a common type of slug round. While some slugs are
exactly that—a 12-gauge metal projectile in a cartridge—a sabot is a
smaller but more aerodynamic projectile surrounded by a "shoe" of some
other material. This "sabot" jacket seals the barrel, increasing
pressure and acceleration, while also inducing spin on the projectile in
a rifled barrel. Once the projectile clears the barrel, the sabot
material falls away, leaving an unmarked, aerodynamic bullet to continue
toward the target. The advantages over a traditional slug are increased
shot power, increased bullet velocity due to the lighter-mass bullet,
and increased accuracy due to the velocity and the reduction in
deformation of the slug itself. Disadvantages versus a traditional slug
include lower muzzle momentum due to reduced mass, reduced damage due to
smaller bullet diameter, and significantly higher per-unit cost.
Specialty ammunition
The unique properties of the shotgun, such as large case capacity,
large bore, and the lack of rifling, has led to the development of a
large variety of specialty shells, ranging from novelties to high tech
military rounds.
Hunting, defensive, and military
Brenneke and Foster type slugs have the same basic
configuration as normal slugs, but have increased accuracy. The hollowed
rear of the Foster slug improves accuracy by placing more mass in the
front of the projectile, therefore inhibiting the "tumble" that normal
slugs may generate. The Brenneke slug takes this concept a bit further,
with the addition of a wad that stays connected to the projectile after
discharge, increasing accuracy. Both slugs are commonly found with fins
or rib, which are meant to allow the projectile to safely squeeze down
during passage through chokes, but they do not increase stability in
flight.
Flechette
rounds contain aerodynamic darts, typically from 8 to 20 in number. The
flechette provide greatly extended range due to their aerodynamic
shape, and improved penetration of light armor. American troops during
the Vietnam War packed their own flechette shotgun rounds, called beehive rounds, after the similar artillery
rounds. However, terminal performance was poor due to the very light
weight of the flechettes, and their use was quickly dropped.
Frag-12 shotgun rounds are a series of special purpose shotgun
grenades, including high explosive blast, fragmentation, and HEAP
grenades intended to be fired from any 12-ga shotgun. They are
distinguished from regular shotgun rounds by a green hull. It has been
proposed as an armament for modern UAVs and is currently being tested
for military deployment.
Grenade rounds use exploding projectiles to increase long
range lethality. These are currently experimental, but the British
FRAG-12, which comes in both armor penetrating and fragmentary forms, is
under consideration by military forces
Less lethal rounds, for riot and animal control
Flexible baton rounds, commonly called bean bags,
fire a fabric bag filled with birdshot or a similar loose, dense
substance. The 'punch' effect of the bag is useful for knocking down
targets; the rounds are used by police to subdue violent suspects. The
bean bag round is by far the most common less lethal
round used. Due to the large surface area of these rounds, they lose
velocity rapidly, and must be used at fairly short ranges to be
effective, though use at extremely short ranges, under 3 m (10 ft), can
result in broken bones or other serious or lethal injuries. The rounds
can also fly in a frisbee-like fashion and cut the person or animal
being fired at. For this reason, these types of rounds are referred to
as less lethal, as opposed to less-than-lethal.
Gas shells spray a cone of gas for several meters. These are primarily used by riot police. They normally contain pepper gas or tear gas. Other variations launch a gas-grenade-like projectile.
Rock salt shells are hand loaded with rock salt,
replacing the standard lead or steel shot. Rock salt shells could be
seen as the forerunners of modern less-lethal rounds. In the United States,
rock salt shells were and are sometimes used by rural civilians to
defend their property. The brittle salt was unlikely to cause serious
injury at long ranges, but would cause painful stinging injuries and
served as a warning.
Rubber slugs or rubber buckshot are similar in
principle to the bean bag rounds. Composed of flexible rubber or plastic
and fired at low velocities, these rounds are probably the most common
choice for riot control. Shapes range from full bore diameter cylinders
to round balls of varying sizes, to a patent pending design "star round"
that resembles a small koosh ball.
TASER International announced in 2007 a new 12 gauge eXtended Range Electronic Projectile or XREP, which contains a small electroshock weapon
unit in a carrier that can be fired from a standard 12 gauge shotgun.
The XREP projectile is fin stabilized, and travels at an initial
velocity of 100 m/s (300 ft/s). Barbs on the front attach the
electroshock unit to the target, with a tassel deploying from the rear
to widen the circuit. A twenty second burst of electrical energy is
delivered to the target. This product is expected to be released to
market in 2008.
Breaching rounds, often called Disintegrator or Hatton rounds, are designed to destroy door locking mechanisms without risking lives.
Bird bombs are low-powered rounds that fire a firecracker that is fused to explode a short time after firing. They are designed to scare animals, such as birds that congregate on airport runways.
Screechers fire a pyrotechnic whistle that emits a loud whistling sound for the duration of its flight. These are also used to scare animals.
Blank
shells contain only a small amount of powder and no actual load. When
fired, the blanks provide the sound and flash of a real load, but with
no projectile. These may be used for simulation of gunfire, scaring
wildlife, or as power for a launching device.
Stinger is a type of shotgun shell which contains 16-00 buck balls made of zytel, and is designed as a non-lethal ammunition ideally used in small spaces.
Novelty and other
Bolo rounds are made of two or more slugs
molded onto steel wire. When fired, the slugs separate, pulling the
wire taut creating a flying blade, which could theoretically decapitate
people and animals or amputate limbs. However, many active shotgun users
consider this to be overstated, and view bolo shells as being less
effective than conventional ammunition. Bolo shell rounds are banned in
many locations (including the US states of Florida and Illinois) due to concerns about their potential lethality. The round is named in reference to bolas, which use two or more weighted balls on a rope to trap cattle or game.
Dragon's Breath
usually refers to a zirconium-based pyrotechnic shotgun round. When
fired, a gout of flame erupts from the barrel of the gun (up to 20 ft).
The visual effect it produces is impressive, similar to that of a short
ranged flamethrower. However it has few tactical uses, mainly
distraction/disorientation.
Flare rounds are sometimes carried by hunters for safety and
rescue purposes. They are available in low and high altitude versions.
Some brands claim they can reach a height of up to 200 m (600 ft).
Legal issues
Globally, shotguns are generally not as heavily regulated as rifles
or handguns, likely because they lack the range of rifles and are not
easily concealable as handguns are; thus, they are perceived as a lesser
threat by legislative authorities. The one exception is a sawed-off shotgun, especially a Lupara, as it is more easily concealed than a normal shotgun.
Australia
Within Australia,
all shotguns manufactured after January 1, 1901 are considered firearms
and are subject to registration and licensing. Most shotguns (including
break-action, bolt-action and lever-action
shotguns) are classed as "Category A" weapons and, as such, are
comparatively easy to obtain a licence for, given a legally recognised
'legitimate reason' (compare to the British requirement for 'good
reason' for a FAC), such as target shooting or hunting. However, pump-action and semi-automatic shotguns
are classed as "Category C" weapons; a licence for this type of firearm
is, generally speaking, not available to the average citizen. For more
information, see Gun politics in Australia.
Canada
Canada has three classifications of firearms: non-restricted,
restricted, and prohibited. Shotguns are found in all three classes.
All non-restricted shotguns must have an overall length of 660 mm
(26 inches). Semi-automatic shotguns must also have a barrel length of
more than 470 mm (18.5 inches) and have a capacity of 5 shells or less
in the magazine to remain non-restricted. All other shotgun action types
(pump/slide, break open, lever, bolt) do not have a magazine limit
restriction or a minimum barrel length provided the overall length of
the firearm remains more than 660 mm (26 inches) and the barrel was
produced by an approved manufacturer. Shotgun barrels may only be
reduced in length to a minimum of 457 mm (18 inches). Non-restricted
shotguns may be possessed with any Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL) or Possession-Only License
(POL) and may be transported throughout the country without special
authorization and may be used for hunting certain species at certain
times of the year.
Semi-automatic shotguns with a barrel length of less than 470 mm
(18.5 inches) are considered restricted and any shotgun that has been
altered so its barrel length is less than 457 mm (18 inches) or if its
overall length is less than 660 mm (26 inches) is considered prohibited.
Restricted and prohibited shotguns may be possessed with a PAL or POL
than has been endorsed for restricted or prohibited grandfathered firearms. These shotguns require special Authorization to Transport (ATT).
The Canadian Firearms Registry
is a government-run registry of all legally owned firearms in Canada.
As of May 2008, the government has provided amnesty from prosecution to
shotgun and rifle owners if they fail to register non-restricted
shotguns and rifles.
See http://www.cfc-cafc.gc.ca/factsheets/r&p_e.asp for an official Canadian list of non-restricted and restricted and prohibited firearms.
UK
In the United Kingdom, a Shotgun Certificate
(SGC) is required to possess a shotgun. These cost £50 and can only be
denied if the chief of police in the area believes and can prove that
the applicant poses a real danger to the public, or if the applicant has
been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term of
three years or more or if the applicant cannot securely store a shotgun
(gun clamps, wire locks and locking gun cabinets are considered secure).
The round number restrictions apply only to the magazine, not the
chamber, so it is legal to have a single-barreled semi-auto or
pump-action shotgun that holds three rounds in total, or a shotgun with
separate chambers (which would need to also be multi-barrelled). For a
shotgun to be held on an SGC, it must be a smooth-bore gun (not an
air-gun) which:
(a) has a barrel not less than 24 inches (610 mm) in length and does
not have any barrel with a bore more than 2 inches (51 mm) in diameter;
(b) either has no magazine or has a non-detachable magazine not capable of holding more than two cartridges;
(c) is not a revolver gun.
Prior to a SGC being issued an interview is conducted with the local
Firearms Officer, in the past this was a duty undertaken by the local
police although more recently this function has been "contracted out" to
civilian staff. The officer will check the location and suitability of
the gun safe that is to be used for storage and conduct a general
interview to establish the reasons behind the applicant requiring a SGC.
An SGC holder can own any number of shotguns meeting these
requirements so long as he can store them securely. No certificate is
required to own shotgun ammunition, but one is required to buy it. There
is no restriction on the amount of shotgun ammunition that can be
bought or owned. There are also no rules regarding the storage of
ammunition.
However, shotgun ammunition which contains fewer than 6 projectiles
requires the appropriate Firearms Certificate (FAC). Shotguns with a
magazine capacity greater than 2 rounds also require the appropriate
Firearms Certificate to own. An FAC costs £50 but is much more
restrictive than an SGC. A new 'variation' is required for each new
caliber of gun to be owned, limits are set on how much ammunition a
person can own at any one time, and an FAC can be denied if the
applicant does not have sufficient 'good reason'. 'Good reason'
generally means hunting, collecting, or target shooting - though other
reasons may be acceptable, defence is not an acceptable reason.
US
In the US, federal law prohibits shotguns from being capable of
holding more than three shells including the round in the chamber when
used for hunting migratory gamebirds such as doves, ducks, and geese.
For other uses, a capacity of any number of shells is generally
permitted. Most magazine-fed shotguns come with a removable magazine
plug to limit capacity to 2, plus one in the chamber, for hunting
migratory gamebirds. Certain states have restrictions on magazine
capacity or design features under hunting or assault weapon laws.
Shotguns intended for defensive use have barrels as short as
18 inches (46 cm) for private use (the minimum shotgun barrel length
allowed by law in the United States without special permits; most
manufactures use a minimum length of 18.5 inches, to give leeway in the
case of a measuring dispute). Barrel lengths of less than 18 inches
(46 cm) as measured from the breechface to the muzzle when the weapon is
in battery with its action closed and ready to fire, or have an overall
length of less than 26 inches (66 cm) are classified as short barreled
shotguns ("sawed-off shotguns") under the 1934 National Firearms Act and are heavily regulated.
Shotguns used by military, police, and other government agencies are exempted from regulation under the National Firearms Act of 1934,
and often have barrels as short as 12 to 14 inches (30 to 36 cm), so
that they are easier to handle in confined spaces. Non-prohibited
private citizens may own short-barreled shotguns by purchasing a $200
tax stamp from the Federal government and passing an extensive
background check (state and local laws may be more restrictive).
Defensive shotguns sometimes have no buttstock or will have a folding stock to reduce overall length even more when required.
See also
References
- Notes
- ^ "scattergun". dictionary.com. Retrieved 2007-05-12.
- ^ http://www.theboxotruth.com/docs/bot3_2.htm
- ^ Shotgun Home Defense Ammunition, Tactical Briefs #10, October 1998
- ^ "Shotgun Home Defense Ammunition". Firearms Tactical Institute.
- ^ Hastings Paradox slug barrels - rifle-like accuracy from shotguns Shooting Industry, June, 1989 by Howard Brant
- ^ Such pistols, like sawed-off or short-barrelled shotguns, are illegal for private citizens to own in the U.S. without the proper federal tax-stamp and paperwork.
- ^ scanned 1728 Cyclopedia page containing the entry on fowling piece
- ^ Firearms in Plymouth Colony
- ^ Blue Book of Gun Values, 13th Ed., S. P. Fjestad
- ^ Bruce N. Canfield (May 2004). "Give Us More Shotguns!". American Rifleman.
-
^ Defense Tech: Small Arms in Iraq:
What Worked, What SuckedWhat a Hoax? - ^ "Taser Xrep". Taser.com. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
- ^ Mossberg 500 Special Purpose Spec Sheet
- ^ "April, 97 Browning". Gun-tests.com. Retrieved 2008-09-05.
- ^ Popular Mechanics, October 1947, p.197 choke and gauge chart.
- ^ "The .410 Bore" by Chuck Hawks
- ^ Popular Mechanics, October 1947 p.196 shot pellet chart left side of page.
- ^ Roger H. Robinson (1973). The police shotgun manual. Thomas. pp. 91–94. ISBN 0-398-02630-0.
- ^ Defense Review, Frag-12 Shotgun Ammunition
- ^ Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory spec sheet on experimental FRAG-12 shotgun grenade round
- ^ Impact Munitions Use: Types, Targets, Effects, NIJ.
- ^ Taser XREP announcement.
- ^ Developments in Non-Lethal Payloads for 12 Gauge Shotguns and 40mm Grenade Launchers
- ^ The 2007 Florida Statutes
- ^ State of Illinois Public Acts, 92nd General Assembly
- ^ "Prohibited Firearms". Retrieved 2008-05-26.
- ^ "Transporting Firearms". Canada Firearms Centre. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
- ^ Tim Naumetz (2008-05-14). "Government extends gun-registration amnesty". Retrieved 2008-05-26.
- Bibliography
- Bob Brister (1976). Shotgunning, The Art and the Science. New Jersey: New Win Publishing. ISBN 0-8329-1840-7.
- Elmer Keith (1950). Shotguns. Pennsylvania: The Stackpole Company. ISBN 0-935632-58-1.
- Michael McIntosh (1999). Best Guns. Alabama: Countrysport Press. ISBN 0-924357-79-7.
- Jack O'Connor (1949, 1965). The Shotgun Book. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-50138-1.
External links
- Shotgun FAQ
- Shotgun sabot separation photography
- "Shotgun Chokes and Gauges." Popular Mechanics, October 1947, p. 196-200. Excellent diagrams and drawings.
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