No one answer. Shotshells intended for turkey are made in 10, 12, and 20 gauge, and the 12 g shells are made in 2 3/4, 3 inch, and 3 1/2 inch. They may be loaded with several different pellet sizes- and some are loaded with two different sizes in the same shell. Answer will depend on the gauge, length, pellet size- and the maker.
You can load only one shot at a time.
Depends on the size of the shot, whether the shot is lead, steel or something else, the weight of the load and the gauge of the shell. A lead 1 oz load of #6 birdshot is about 225 pellets.
You don't mention what gauge. You will have to or else cut one open.
That depends on the size of the shot in the 3 inch shotgun shell,and the weight of the shot.
Depends on the gun and size load you shoot. Full and extra full are two comonly used chokes. Set up a turkey target or piece of notebook paper at 25 yards and see how many shot pellets are in the kill zone (neck and head). you need to have at least 6 or seven shots in the kill zone. If you do, move out to 40 yards and try from there. I shoot #5 shot and usually put 15 pellets in the kill zone at 40 yds and rarely miss a turkey
You can load as many BB into the repeater as it will hold, BUT only one pellet at a time can be loaded into the barrel. One shot one pellet.
Depends on the load and what the maker of the choke/shotgun say.
The number of pellets contained in the shell will depend on the size of the shot.
Everything is loaded from the end of the muzzle. Pour a quantity of black powder down the barrel and tamp it down with the push-rod. Follow that with some shot pellets and tamp those down too. That forms a tight 'plug'.
Airsoft is legal in many countries. Any gun that shoots plastic pellets are airsoft guns.
Shotguns fire shells with many small pellets- or shot. The shot string is a 3 dimensional view of the shot in flight. When bird hunting with a shotgun, your goal is to have the shot string intersect the bird in flight.
pellets, powder