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.
3
Full choke for all buck shot.
You don't mention what gauge. You will have to or else cut one open.
A shotguns gauge is a measure related to the diameter of the smooth shotgun bore and the size of the shotshell designed for that bore. Gauge or diameter of the bore is determined by the diameter of 1 lead pellet times the number of pellets required to equal 1 pound. ex. 12 gauge is equal to the diameter of 1 of the 12 lead balls that equals 1 pound. ex. 20 gauge is equal to the diameter of 1 of 20 lead balls that equals 1 pound. ex. 3 gauge is equal to the diameter of 1 of the 3 lead balls that equals one pound. The larger number of gauge the smaller the bore.
what you do is you feed it 2 pellets every 3 days that is what my mom told me
Yes, it is larger, the smaller the gauge the larger the bore i.e. 3 gauge is larger in diameter than a 8 gauge or a 12 gauge.
SHould be marked on barrel. If not, have a gunmsith check it out.
The number of pellets contained in the shell will depend on the size of the shot.
I have a model 167 series E and it is a 12 gauge up to 3" magnum
Tri-Ball 12 gauge buckshot ammunition loaded by Dixie Slugs Company has .60 caliber hard cast lead pellets that weigh three fourths of an ounce each. Each shell fires 3 pellets for a total payload of 2 1/4 ounces at 1100 feet per second.
if you have betta pellets, then you need to feed them 3 pellets once a day