Ok, I've always lived by the rule of 50 yards for #4 buck for coyotes. Yesterday I was reading on another sight about a guy saying the #4 buck has a range out to and exceeding 100 yards. Saying he took one as far as 110 yards. :eek:
My longest shot with a shotgun is 45 yards with 2 3/4" #4 birdshot (all I had, 12 gauge 870 super mag 24" mod choke and half box of #4 pheasant load, I just moved into a new house) and it took two shots. One to kick him out of high gear with the after burners on spinning him around and the other to put him down. I was standing on the deck and the coyote had snuck up and attacked my black lab mix. The coyote weighed just under 40lbs, a large male, and when I skinned him I couldn't find which pellet killed him. I honestly don't know why he died. He had a couple broken bones (small bones) but no major life ending damage or trama.
A month later I upgraded to 3.5" 00 buck and full choke and when another coyote tried the same thing I unfortunately wasn't as quick and the coyote was round 80 yards before I got off a few shots. I don't know if he ran through a pattern hole, if they bounced off, or if I just plane missed, but he didn't go down or really break stride. Changed directions a few times, but that was it.
So what's your experiences with a shotgun? What range would you say is max for a shot load based off what you've done?
Incidently, my calling shotgun is now my 870 supermag, 20" IC rifle sight slug barrel, Fed 2 3/4" #4 buckshot or Rem Premier 3" #2 hevishot. The hevishot patterns tighter and denser but the #4 buckshot has more knockdown and is cheaper. I'm not sure which I like better yet, need more field experience.
later,
scruffy