Slug barrel

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A slug barrel is a barrel for a shotgun that is designed primarily to fire slugs.

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When slugs are fired in a standard, choked barrel, the slug is deformed by the choke as it exits. The degree of deformation is most acute with fuller chokes, which were among the most widely used in stock shotguns up until about 1990. Early shotgun slugs were "rifled" with deformable fins cast into the outside of the soft lead slug, which allowed the slug to swage down to fit the choke. With an open choke, the reduction in diameter is minimal, so accuracy does not suffer much; tighter chokes, however, deform the slug enough to impact accuracy significantly, and the impact of the slug on the choke (at velocities around 1500 feet per second) could also stretch the barrel with repeated firings.

The first slug barrels were cylinder bore barrels (no choke) outfitted with rifle sights, which are far better suited to accurate shooting of still targets than the standard bead sight used for shooting small, moving targets with shotshells. Most pump-action and semiautomatic shotguns have barrels that can easily be changed in under a minute without tools, so having more than one barrel for a single shotgun is common. With the addition of a slug barrel, the standard shotgun used for bird hunting, skeet or trap shooting can then be used for hunting large game, such as deer at ranges of over 100 yards.

A later innovation was the rifled choke tube. It could be used in any barrel designed to use interchangeable choke tubes, and it provided rifling for the last few inches of the shotgun barrel. While this wasn't enough to impart a large amount of spin, it did impart some, and that was all that was needed for the short, fat, and inherently stable shotgun slugs of the time.

The next step was the "Paradox" barrel by Hastings, a manufacturer of aftermarket rifled slug barrels. The term "paradox" was due to the fact that shotguns are defined by their smoothbore barrels, and a "rifled shotgun" was something of a contradiction in terms--not to mention a tricky legal issue, as any firearm with a rifled barrel over .50 inches is legally considered a destructive device in the United States. A BATFE ruling was obtained stating that a firearm designed to fire shotshells that was converted to fire shotgun slugs with the addition of a rifled barrel was still a shotgun, and thus not a destructive device. Now many manufacturers offer shotguns for sale with rifled barrels already installed. Bolt action and single shot break-open designs are particularly accurate, and with modern saboted slugs designed for use only with rifled barrels, the modern slug gun offers nearly the accuracy of a typical rifle.

The widespread availability of rifled shotgun barrels was quickly followed by the introduction of special slugs designed for use with the rifled barrels. The short, fat, unaerodynamic Foster slug was no longer needed for its inherent stability; new slugs were smaller in diameter, usually .50 caliber (12.7 mm) (compared to the .73 inch (18.5 mm) bore diameter of a 12 gauge), and carried in a plastic sabot. The saboted slug had half the frontal area of the old slugs, which translated to half the drag, and double the penetration. Lighter, faster slugs were also possible, allowing for a flatter trajectory and longer range. With the wide selection of barrels, shotshells and slugs, the modern shotgun is a tremendously versatile tool.

While shotgun slugs were originally developed as a convenience to the hunter who already owned a shotgun and did not want to purchase a rifle for hunting game, heavily populated areas now allow large game hunting only with shotguns. The limited range of the slow, fat slug--even a saboted slug--compared to a rifle bullet offers a safety advantage by limiting the maximum range. While buckshot is capable of taking deer-sized game, it is only effective at short ranges, generally under 50 yards. A properly selected barrel and slug load can triple that range.

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