Adam West assists the author during part of the shooting phase of the testing. Due to the heavy repetition of firing over 100 rounds of 12 gauge slugs in this single shot platform, shooters tookturns in this position.
The barrel was cut and retested every inch, from 30 inches all the way down to 6.875 inches. For the purposes of this kind of testing, although not typically a gunsmithing tool, a chopsaw was fast and effective combined with a reamer and de-burring tool.
The firing line was looking more like a construction site than a shooting facility during preparation for the testing. A 1/2-inch drill and reamers and a 5Kw generator were added to the equipment shown before the testing could begin.
Prior to starting, the barrel was measured and marked in 1-inch increments.
Muzzle velocity measured with a PACT MKIV XP Chrnograph & Timer from a distance of 8-feet from the muzzle. Ammunition used was 12 Gauge, 2.75-inch Remington Slugger 1 ounce, lead, Rifled Slugs.
The “after” photo. The H&R single shot with a 6.75-inch barrel and a representative of most of the spent shotgun hulls used in the testing.
The original muzzle end of the barrel with a section of the last cut of the testing. Although there is a much greater amount of material in the thickness of the barrel towards the action end, the bore remained perfectly accurate when measured after every cut once the choke end was removed.
Spread testing was conducted from a distance of 15 yards from the Muzzle. Ammunition used was 12 Gauge, 2.75-inch Remington Buckshot, 9-pellet, OOBK.
A 10-inch group of 00-Buck Shot fired with the 30-inch barrel from a distance of 15 yards. All 9 pellets landed in the center of mass, which was the point of aim. This group actually dropped as small as 8.5 inches when fired from an 18-inch barrel length.
The chrono screens would shudder with each blast from the mighty 12 gauge.
The original 12 gauge H&R Single Shot Shotgun had a 30-inch barrel. When we were finished with the testing it was left with a 6.875-inch barrel.
The new, the old and the ugly. After the H&R was cut to a barrel length of only 6.875 inches, the old, cracked and weathered stock dwarfed the action and the new barrel. A custom birdshead grip could have solved the problem of cosmetics but the author prefers a stock and not just a pistol grip on short 12 gauge guns. Proving the often heard “those damn collapsible M16 stocks are being made to fit on anything,” the author heavily modified an Advanced Technology SHOTFORCE buttstock for this application. A high visibility front bead was added as well as the new, required engraving when making the transition from Title I to Title II firearm. The old, original engraving can be seen in the inset at the top.