I’ve been crashing to meet a publisher’s deadline (they
can be sooo pushy) and was unable to put together a totally Western-oriented
article. So, I’ve put together an entry using three shotgun-related articles
from my e-book published by Osprey: The Big Book
of Gun Trivia: Everything you want to know, don't want to know, and don't know
you need to know.
Some of this covers modern shotguns,
but much applies to shotguns of the Old West. Either way, if you have an
interest in firearms, this may be worthwhile. The e-book may be purchased from
any Amazon site, US or otherwise.
How are the gauges of shotguns determined? The caliber or
bore diameter of shotguns is determined by the diameter of a single ball
equaling the diameter of the bore after forming a number of identically sized
balls from one Imperial Libra pound (453.6 grams) of lead. For a 12-gauge
shotgun the pound of lead has been formed into 12 equal sized balls (the result
can vary depending on what value is used for the density of lead). Thus, the
larger the gauge number the smaller the caliber of the bore—see below table. Common
US shotgun gauges are 10-, 12-, 16-, and 20-gauge with the 12- and 20-gauges
being the most popular. Unrealized by many, in the Old West the 10-gauge
shotgun was very widely used (“Doc” Holliday of O.K. Corral gunfight fame
carried a sawed off Belgium-made Meteor 10-gauge—“street howitzer.” By the way,
the gunfight with the McLaurys and Clantons actually occurred on the opposite side
of the block from the O.K. Corral.) 8-gauge shotguns saw some popularity too. The
4-, 8-, 14-, 24-, 28-, and 32-gauge were popular in the States and Europe to varying
degrees in the past, but are virtually unheard of today, the “lost gauges.” 14-
and 28-gauge shotguns were widely used in the Old West along with the more common US
gauges mentioned earlier. Shotguns larger than 10-gauge have been outlawed for
hunting in the US since 1918.
Modern shotgun shells for size comparison.
From 1922 there were
14½-gauge Greener Mk I and II police shotguns using a .577/450-inch* Martini-Henry
single-shot, drop-block action, modified from old service rifles. The idea was
that this odd British gauge prevented stolen guns from being used as the shells
could not be privately purchased. It was circumvented by merely wrapping a smaller
16-gauge shotshell with a few layers of paper or tape. This was countered by
developing a new shotshell in the late 1930s. This new round for the Greener Mk
III police shotgun was an all brass case slightly bottlenecked down to
14½-gauge. Additionally it had a circular groove in the head encircling the
primer. On the face of the breech plate on either side of the firing pin were
two fixed studs that fit into the groove. This prevented paper-wrapped smaller shells
from being loaded. Most of these shotguns, produced until 1964, were issued to prison
guards and the Egyptian police, but also served in many British colonies. They
were commonly known as “EGs”, Egyptian guns.
* The .577-450
Martini-Henry cartridge was actually .458-caliber being a necked down version
of the older .577-inch Snider.
It is spelled
“gauge” (abbreviated “ga.”) and never “gage” as is sometimes seen. “Gage” is
often seen in US military publications, but that still does not make it correct.
The British-developed gauge system is also used in Europe, e.g., 12 Gauge Schrotflinte in Germany, although the British usually call it “12
bore.” Older shotshells were sometimes headstamped, e.g., “No. 12,” but they
were seldom called such. “Caliber” is also used to designate shotgun gauges in
some countries. The Russians call it 12 калибра (kalibra). The French call
it a calibre 12 fusil de chasse
(hunting gun).
Of course Justin Wilson (1914-2001) had his own description
of shotguns. “We rush back in the house and I get my twice-barrel car-a-bine,
and Jean Ba’tiste get his automatic shootgun. Dat a one hole gun that shoot
three times out of the same hole if the game warden there. If he ain’t there,
it shoot five time right through the same place.”
The mathematical
formula for determining gauge is:
It might be easier
to simply use this table:
Gauge Caliber Millimeter
4-gauge 0.935-inch 23.79mm
8-gauge 0.835-inch 21.21mm
10-gauge 0.775-inch 19.69mm
12-gauge 0.729-inch 18.53mm
14-gauge 0.693-inch 17.60mm
16-gauge 0.662-inch 16.83mm
20-gauge 0.615-inch 16.53mm
24-gauge 0.580-inch 14.73mm
28-gauge 0.550-inch 13.97mm
32-gauge 0.526-inch 13.36mm
Even larger
“shotguns” existed for commercial waterfowl hunting—“market hunting”—in the 19th
and early 20th centuries. These were known as “punt guns”—aka “stanchion guns,”
“market guns,” or “merchant’s guns”—as they were mounted on stanchions (support
posts) fitted aboard punts—on small flat-bottom boats with a square-cut bow. Punt
guns were custom-built 1.75-inch to over 2-inch caliber (44mm to 50mm-plus) swivel
guns loaded with shot or scrap metal to “blast entire flocks” of fowl rising
from marshes and lakes. They had 8-foot (2.43-meter) or longer barrels. The
overall length could be up to 13 feet (3.96 meters). As for blowing “entire
flocks” out of the sky, the average number of birds downed per shot was 16. Large
commercial operations through would employ dozens of boats on line for barrage
fire. These were actually muzzle-loading, flintlock- or percussion-fired cannons
rather than true shotguns. There were some later breech-loading models using
shotgun-type shells in 2- and 4-gauge. Punt-gunning is still a suctioned, but
highly regulated, sport in Britain. In the US, punt-gunning was outlawed in
most states in the 1860s and by Federal law in 1918.
Then what is the “410” shotgun? There are a couple of exceptions to designating shotguns
by gauge. The gauge system was not applied to the “four-ten” shotgun popular in
the US and Britain. Its bore is .410-caliber. If designated in the gauge system
it would be 67.5-gauge. One occasionally sees it described as “410-gauge,” but
this is entirely incorrect. The Air Force even marked cans of .410 survival
shotgun shells as “cartridges, shotshell, .410 gage,” to incorporate two errors,
designating it by gauge and misspelling it as “gage.” It has been called
36-gauge (not even close, that would be 0.506-inch) and in Europe it is known
as the 12mm (it is actually 10.4mm—“4-10” transposed by coincidence). Regardless,
these are accepted designations and “36-gauge” and “12mm” are sometimes marked
in parentheses on .410 cartons. It has been suggested that “36-gauge” was used
simply to fall smoothly in line with the above run of standard shotgun gauges
and this may well have been the case. The .410 appeared in Britain in the 1870s
and did not become common in the US until about World War I. It is often
claimed that the .410 was derived from the .44 Extra Long (.44 XL or EL)
introduced by Ballard in 1876 for its single-shot rifles, but was replaced by the
.44-40 Winchester. The assumption that the .410 was derived from the .44 XL was
because there was a shotshell variant, but the .410 shotshell had long been in
use in Britain and Europe.
There were also
little 9mm (0.355-inch) rimfire shotguns available in the US in the 1920s and earlier
in Europe. These smallest of shotguns were intended for small pests and known
as “garden guns.” Today the 9mm shotshell has been “replaced” by the .22 Long
Rifle birdshot, aka “ratshot” or “snakeshot.” These tiny shotshells are only
good for rats, mice, and snakes within 10 feet (3 meters) or closer. Even then,
don’t expect immediate disabling wounds, in fact, they may attack if wounded
(just kidding). Except at pointblank range it will not ever penetrate layered bird
feathers. It provides a 6-inch (150mm) shot pattern 6 feet (1.82 meters) from
the muzzle. The shot size is officially called “dust” (0.04-inch—1.01mm) in
diameter. They are also loaded with the next larger shot size, No. 12
(0.05-inch—1.03mm).
Do the different colors of shotgun shells have a meaning? Shotgun shells may
be thick paper or plastic with brass heads or all brass or all plastic including
the head (introduced in the 1960s). Empty shotgun cartridges are often called
“hulls.” Paper and plastic shotgun shells are colored with red, green, and blue
being the most common. In the US most ammunition companies produce red shells,
but Remington uses green and Peters blue. UMC used to use green and maroon. There
are exceptions among other manufacturers to include foreign shotgun shells. Other
colors such as black, light blue, brown, and tan will be encountered. There is
one notable exception. From 1960 Federal Cartridge Company began producing
20-gauge shells with yellow cases allowing them to be easily identified if
mixed with 12-gauge shells; the two most popular American gauges.
Shotgun shells were and are packed in 25-round cartons since the "beginning of time immortal."
The reason for
this is that a 20-gauge shell loaded into a 12-gauge shotgun will catch on the
forward lip of the chamber, the chamber being slightly larger in diameter than
the bore. When a break-open breech-loading shotgun is opened the chamber
appears empty as the shell is 2-3/4 or 3 inches* down the chamber and a
12-gauge shell can inadvertently be loaded atop the 20-gauge. The carnage can
well be imagined (Well, best not to imagine it.). Yellow 20-gauge shells though
have not been 100 percent standardized throughout the industry, so take
appropriate precautions. Federal 16-gauge shells are purple as they can
similarly slip through the chamber of 10-gauge shotguns, even if there are
fewer opportunities of this occurring as the 10-gauge is none too common now,
although it has re-achieved a degree of popularity in recent years.
* The 12-gauge
2-3/4-inch (70mm) long shell is standard in the US. The 3-inch (76mm) is a
magnum load and it should never be attempted to load them into a 2-3/4-inch
chamber. Most modern 12-gauge shotguns have 3-inch chambers. There is also a
little used 3-1/2-inch (90mm) long-range round, introduced in 1987, requiring
special shotguns. The 12-gauge 2-1/2-inch (64mm) was standard in Europe and the
Old West. The shorter rounds may be fired in longer chambered shotguns, but
there may be feed problems in semi-automatic and pump shotguns.
I guess we need to talk about shot sizes sometime--bird shot, rabbit shot, buck shot, etc sometime, along with slugs.
The Hardest Ride (Now available I trade paperback.)
Tears of the River
WOW!!! I definitely need this info. Thanks, Gordon!! fabulous info.
ReplyDeleteGlad to help Meg.
DeleteThanks for clearing up that "larger gauge number, smaller caliber" business. However, I'm still a little cloudy on the 410 issue.
ReplyDeleteWhen I took hunter safety in high school (Red River Parish, Louisiana), the instructor put us kids in a line with 20-gauge shotguns and NO ear protection. I still have to turn my head to hear soft music.
Thanks for the scoop.
"410" is .410-caliber, no gauge about it.
DeleteI know how you feel. I have a 10% hearing loss owing to a variety of weapons. The loudest weapon I ever fired was a 57mm recoilless rifle. It fired larger weapons, but for shear piercing noise, that weapon took the blue ribbon.
A very comprehensive article!
ReplyDeleteI have a friend with a five shot Ruger .38 that she carries. It is loaded with tiny shot much like the .22 Long Rifle birdshot you describe. I don't know why she carries such a ridiculous load (we are indeed in the wild west) against frequent trespassers, fence cutters, thieves, coyotes, mountain lions, rattle snakes, etc.
May daughter carries a .44-40 Colt New Service on the ranch in Mexico. One empty chamber and three birdshot as rattlesnakes are a problem. Then two semi-jacketed hollow-points for the rare coyote, wild dogs, and skunks. Those critters have automatic death warrants owning to rabies.
DeleteExcellent article, Gordo. I have bookmarked it for future reference.
ReplyDeleteI'll post more articles on ammunition in the future. There's lots of misconceptions.
Delete