no
with the wingmaster barrel you can only shoot lead, but if you change the barrel to a slugster you can shoot slugs and buckshot, they also have a barrel for steel shot to.
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.
yes for a shotgun you need a rifle barrel DO NOT shoot slugs if you have a poly-choke!
as long as there are no cracks in the barrel, yes. it simply means not to shoot slugs thru the barrel.
It is designed to shoot .177 Caliber pellets, not BB's. It has a rifled barrel, BB's will ruin the barrel if they are forced to shoot through it.
you get a gun and shoot people you get a gun and shoot people
No. Shoot only the caliber printed on the barrel.
No. Only shoot the caliber printed on the barrel.
Assuming your shotgun has two triggers, you can fire either first. If you have one trigger, the order of fire can vary massively...use a gauge to check the bore on your gun, If you don't have one just use a coin and see how far it will go down the front of the barrel, or make a target out of cardboard to see which barrel is the more open barrel, by patterning the barrels. once you know which barrel is the the more open choke, you are ready to determine which barrel you want to shoot first, and as a quail hunter on the rise you will usually shoot the barrel with the more open choke first, saving the tighter choked barrel , as the game gets farther away. Source: shotgunworld.com
Shoot it. Get some decent factory ammo, clean the barrel VERY well, take it out to the range, and shoot it. Once you have a few hundred rounds down it, clean it. Then take it out and shoot it some more. If you're looking to break in a competition barrel, then you do it slowly. It is best done with handloads, slowly increasing to full power loads. Just don't neglect to clean the barrel VERY WELL before you put that first round downrange.
to hold the fish whilst you shoot them!!