Do Shotgun Slugs Deserve Another Chance?
BY Herschel Smith3 years, 4 months ago
At my gun club’s range the other day, one of the other members let me shoot a couple of his straight-wall deer rifles. He told me that before he found the right bullets, he had lost a couple of well-hit deer. I was sympathetic, because losing a deer hurts, but part of me thought That never happened with slugs. Maybe the shotgun slug deserves another chance before it lumbers off to extinction.
Extinction definitely seems to be where deer slugs are headed. My local store, located in the middle of good Iowa deer country, used to sell as many scoped 20-gauge Remington 1100 packages as they could put together before deer season. Now, it’s hard to find a slug gun in the rack there, but there are plenty of .45-70 lever actions, ARs in .350 Legend and .450 Bushmaster, and a few bolt-action rifles, too.
I get it. Rifles are cool in a way that slug guns aren’t. Shotguns are bulky and heavy, and they can kick hard with slugs. They aren’t as accurate as rifles are, either. On the plus side, at real-world whitetail hunting ranges, slugs make big holes in deer. Often they make one hole going in and another on the way out. The blood trails are short and easy to follow.
Back when I started deer hunting in the early 80s, everyone ganged up and drove woodlots. Deer drives often result in shots at walking and running deer. I saw deer shot in some creative places, and learned that while it’s possible to hit a deer with a slug without killing it, it’s not an easy thing to do. I could never manage to do it.
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As deer hunting became a bigger deal, and a bigger business, gun and ammo makers spent a lot of time making slugs shoot more accurately. Rifled barrels and slugs encased in plastic sabots came along in the late 80s and early 90s, and after twenty years or so of constant R&D and improvement, slug guns could shoot 1-2 inch groups at 100 yards. Even I could shoot a group I could cover with my hand at 200 yards with the right gun and ammo (Ithaca Deerslayer III, Winchester XP3), although for shooting at deer under any but ideal conditions, 150 yards is a better maximum range for sabots and rifled shotguns.
While it’s true that sabot slugs aren’t as big around as full-bore slugs, they’re still big. Most 12 gauge slugs are loaded with .50 caliber bullets. Even 20 gauges have .45 caliber bullets, and in my experience with them, they expand impressively.
Well, I think shotguns are pretty cool too. With the thin barrel I don’t find shotguns heavy unless it’s a very long barrel (like duck, goose or upland bird gun), and in that case, hunt with a tactical shotgun. I watched a guy use a Benelli M4 and put slugs on a fist size target at 100 yards. Of course, his shoulder was bruised at the end of the day.
On June 29, 2021 at 9:33 pm, Heywood said:
That is interesting. I don’t know if there still is, but there used to be specific areas where I grew up that were shotgun only for deer. I still know a few people who use them every whitetail season.
On June 30, 2021 at 8:47 am, Ned said:
I’ve only shot one deer with a straight walled case – a .44 mag rifle. The bullet was handloaded HP and fully penetrated a big New Mexico mule deer at around 50 yards. The deer dropped on the spot. I’ve shot 4 bulls with a muzzle loader, 3 with sabots – none had to be tracked – and one mule deer at around 175 yards with a muzzle loader sabot slug that also dropped on the spot.
I’ve also seen deer soak up badly placed hits from bottle necked cartridges and be lost. I think bullet placement is paramount even with a shotgun, though admittedly I’ve no experience shooting a deer with a shotgun. But I’ve been impressed on paper at least by the slug and shotgun technology. Seems like a good accurate and hard hitting combination for shooting deer at reasonable ranges.
On June 30, 2021 at 11:39 am, RCW said:
And for those who want/need an expanding slug, there’s these:
makerbullets.com/proddetail.php?prod=12GASLUGREX
On July 1, 2021 at 11:41 am, Paul B said:
I have used slugs, muzzles, and now straight walled rifle rounds. Plan on using a 350 legends bolt made by Ruger and a 50 caliber traditions muzzy during the
He muzzy only season. I have shot deer as close as 25 yards and as far as 175 yards. Even rifle shotguns have trouble with the long shot which occurs often if you are in the edge of timber looking at a field.
I love deer hunting and will do it as long as I can