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Avery Arms
01-06-2015, 08:11 PM
I've been sorting through my shotshell collection and came across a bunch of heavy #2 12ga rounds, some 2.75's with 1 1/2oz of shot and some 3" with 1 7/8oz of shot.

I figured these for obsolete goose loads but remington still offers these loads with lead pellets and gets $30 & $37 a box for them so someone must still be using them for something.

The only hunter I know that uses lead #2's uses them for shooting midget antelope in Africa.

labradigger1
01-06-2015, 08:23 PM
Turkey!
I load 10 gauge w/ #2's at 2-1/2 ounce w/ mix 47 buffer and use them in a sp-10 Remington, turkeys don't stand a chance when head shot.
Lab

bdicki
01-06-2015, 08:26 PM
Coyote.

Beagle333
01-06-2015, 08:31 PM
Sometimes you need a lot of punch in early fox squirrel season to get em through the 100' tall, thick oak canopies of a swamp bottom.

country gent
01-06-2015, 09:09 PM
We ised to keep a box of those handy for marauding critters in the chicken coop. Never knew what it was going to be but those heavy #2s seemed to do a great job.

Hogtamer
01-06-2015, 09:37 PM
Turkey hunters

DuckHunterJon
01-07-2015, 10:45 AM
Coyote and fox when they get too close to the chicken coop!

Treeman
01-07-2015, 11:23 AM
Fox. I know some turkey hunters use them too.....but that never made sense to me since turkey are usually shot on the ground and small shot to the head and neck don't mess up the meat.

6pt-sika
01-07-2015, 01:36 PM
#2 is to large for turkey in the state of Virginia or so that's what the game department says !

I think coyotes or intruders would be fine . A load of #2 lead to the face of an intruder should put his lights out FOREVER !

6pt-sika
01-07-2015, 01:39 PM
The only hunter I know that uses lead #2's uses them for shooting midget antelope in Africa.

Blue Duiker perhaps ?

big bore 99
01-07-2015, 02:12 PM
Coyote and fox when they get too close to the chicken coop!
I caught a fox running out of my chicken coop with a hen in his mouth. Got him from about 30 yards. When I skinned him out, I found only 2 holes. Was using 7 1/2 too.

skeettx
01-07-2015, 04:29 PM
Perfect for Sandhill Cranes

Mike

p.s. lead shot ok for cranes, but you can NOT shoot geese or ducks while having lead shot in possession

beemer
01-07-2015, 08:01 PM
A couple of ground hogs that were working overtime in my garden found out the hard way how #2 works.

Dave

murf205
01-07-2015, 09:39 PM
I've been sorting through my shotshell collection and came across a bunch of heavy #2 12ga rounds, some 2.75's with 1 1/2oz of shot and some 3" with 1 7/8oz of shot.

I figured these for obsolete goose loads but remington still offers these loads with lead pellets and gets $30 & $37 a box for them so someone must still be using them for something.

The only hunter I know that uses lead #2's uses them for shooting midget antelope in Africa.


I was crow hunting with a friend who had been given 200 rnds of Rem Express 2 3/4" #2's. I was shooting 7 1/2's and having a hard time killing any crows, so he told me to put the "Tweety Bird" shells away and try the #2's. Man, what a difference. The his the ground dead as a hammer. I have since gone to #4's for more pellet count but the results are the same.

CLAYPOOL
01-07-2015, 10:18 PM
Been looking very hard at some "Buck and Ball" at Zanders. Can't figure what I would do with them. They have about 10 cases that have had the boxes get wet. They are made over seas and sold as NSI Multi-Defense Buckshot. Law Enforcement. 12 Ga. 2 3/4 1300 fps - 1 x.650 RB + 6 x 1BK. I know they would be maybe O.K. for home defence, but that Round Ball makes me stop and think for town people. Out here I know where ALL the houses are and how far away. So oooooo.......

Treeman
01-08-2015, 11:43 AM
In shotgun only areas where buckshot is legal that buck and ball would be dandy. What little I shot of it put the ball the same place as slug loads but buckshot all around it!

DLCTEX
01-08-2015, 01:13 PM
Turkeys and varmits, including the two legged variety. At 90 pellets to the ounce, an effective pattern.

Rattlesnake Charlie
01-08-2015, 08:37 PM
Varmints.

All those homesteading farmers and ranchers knew what worked. Still does.

centershot
01-15-2015, 10:50 PM
I used to use #2 shot in 3" mag loads for waterfowl. Then the Do-Gooders put an end to that. But, I still use it for turkeys and varmints. Two's work really well on turkey, come to find out! I was one who used to use 5's or 6's for turkey thinking that it gave a better pattern than larger shot. It did, but unless you hit the head/neck area it often wasn't an instant kill and if you aimed low, you might just roll the bird over and have him run off! I was talking about turkey loads with a couple of friends one day and was shocked to hear they both used #2 shot, even in 2-3/4" hulls! "You don't have enough pellets in those loads!" I said. Their reply was that you only need one, because a #2 pellet will penetrate a turkey so much better than a smaller pellet! I tried it, they were correct! That was 30 tears ago and I'm still using 2's. I shot an 18 pound Tom several years back at a measured 72 yards (No BS, I went back and measured it with a 50' tape measure!), ONE pellet went through that bird, he was dead by the time I got to him! As Robert Ruark once said, "Use enough gun!"

Rally
03-25-2015, 01:38 AM
Nuisance beaver in low light conditions, and a great home defense load also.

GoodOlBoy
03-25-2015, 01:48 AM
#2 is also good medicine for a big old coon. I have had some old big coons that #4 long range express knocked them out of a tree and we lost the coon after it hit the ground and skedaddled... Honestly BB is a bit better, but finding lead BB shot these days isn't a inexpensive task. Particularly since I don't own a 12 anymore.

GoodOlBoy

centershot
03-27-2015, 03:00 PM
Nuisance beaver in low light conditions, and a great home defense load also. Nuisance beaver?? Like there's another kind of beaver????????