I've been following the Hevi-Shot articles with a lot of interest as it seems to pattern tighter than anything else. Of particular interest is the fact that the shot is by no means perfectly round. This goes against everything I was taught about reloading shotshells. The gun writers are claiming that it patterns well because it is heavier than lead and this overcomes the fact that it's nowhere near perfectly round.
The problem with this theory is that I've seen other examples of shot that isn't perfectly round that also patterned well.
Case 1: Bismuth shot
I've been reloading this for quite a while now for Waterfowl and it patterns extremely well based upon the patterning board and actual results in the field. If you examine this stuff, you'll find it's not perfectly round either, kind of halfway between lead shot and Hevi-Shot. And, it's not as dense (heavy) as Hevi-Shot or Lead.
Case 2: Homemade Shot
I went to the Trap Club one day and there was an older gentleman there who was selling homemade shot. He had made his own shotmaker (described it to me), used scavenged range lead and was trying to sell it to make a buck or two as he needed money to supplement his pension. I examined the stuff and it was about as round as Bismuth shot. I KNEW it
wouldn't pattern worth a darn but the guy needed money and was selling it for $40/hundredweight, so I bought 200# and figured I would melt it down and cast bullets from it since the price was reasonable for the lead alone where I live.
I forgot to keep a close enough eye on my own supply of Commercial shot and one day decided to go shoot a few rounds of trap. Rats, I was out of shot. I looked at the homemade shot again as I hadn't melted it down yet, figured what the heck, it was better than nothing and made 150 shells up.
I went to the Trap Club and shot all six boxes. The clays smoked as they always had in the past and my scores were identical to my normal scores.
The two examples above have pretty well convinced me that you don't need perfectly round shot as I have been taught in the past.
Any Opinions?