No however barreta 302 and 303 is the same gun browning built the b-80 under their patients and made a slug barrel that will match up to the b-80 for around $300 plus shipping
Browning did not offer one, but you may find an aftermarket Hastings barrel (www.hastingsbarrels.com) that will do the trick.
Shooting rifled slugs is the ONLY way to shoot thru a smoothbore for deer. If you shoot sabot slugs thru a smoothbore, it will not spin and therefore not be accurate. For accuracy, the slug must spin out of the barrel. Either shoot a rifled slug thru a smooth barrel, or shoot a saboted slug thru a rifled barrel.
If you see spiral grooves when looking down the barrel, then it is rifled.
They don't make one for that gun.
That is correct.
A rifled slug- yes.
any kind will kill a deer but if you have a smooth barrel than u need smooth slugs if you have a rifled barrel you need a rifled slug
yes.
Look inside. If it has lands and grooves, it is rifled. If it does not, it is smooth
In general, rifled slugs are intended to go through a smooth bore. The twist rates of a rifled slug against a rifled barrel may not agree. If you were trying to get the best out of your rifled barrel I would think that going to a saboted slug would give better performance.
A rifled slug can be fired from a smoothbore barrel with relative accuracy to about 100 yards. By relative accuracy, I mean that shots can be held in a 5 inch circle. That is about the size of the target zone on a deer. For a rifled barrel, rifled slugs should NOT be used, but sabot slugs can be.
yes a rifled shotgun barrel or smooth shotgun barrel