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December 3, 2005, 03:20 PM | #1 |
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12g slugs for stopping Grizzlies and Polar bears
All: I am putting together a bear gun over the winter, so I wonder what the consensus is for 12g slugs from a smooth bore 18-20inch barrel for immobilizing a Grizzly or Polar bear by breaking major bones?
This is for close-range defensive use only, (less than 25M/yds) a very different task than bear hunting from a distance. Evidently, good preventative measures like smell signature control, bear-proof food containers, perimeter electric fences and alarms and choice/use of terrain, crack flares and bear spray (OC), and using rubber slug to discourage curious yearling bears at 50M/yds, mean that shooting a bear is unlikely, but if I have to, what are the best slugs to use? I have heard of Brenneke slugs, but I am unsure exactly what this means... I will be using slugs in a 6 or 8 shot Mossberg 590 or 590A1, with Ghost Ring or red dot sights, as that is what I am shopping for now, second-hand, in Canada. I am importing a Knoxx SpecOps stock to ease the pain of all this, so shooting 3" slugs may also be an option. Any cartridges you reccommend would have to be available off-the-shelf locally, as shipping costs are very high here, in North-West Canada, North of 60. I really need to know what people are using! filmbeargun |
December 3, 2005, 04:32 PM | #2 |
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Slugs are OK for bears, but rifles are better...they penetrate more and are more accurate. The advatage of a slug gun is the faster follow up shots (which can be very important) and the fact that they cost a lot less (for the guns and the ammo). You definitely want to use 3" mags and the heaviest slug you can get (at least 1 1/4 oz).
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December 3, 2005, 05:03 PM | #3 |
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For the distance that you specified I think that a 3 inch slug is a good choice, especially with 6/8 shots it would be a very good choice, yes rifles penitrate better but you would have to work the bolt or whatever action you chose and the pump is probably going to be faster and you will have more shots.
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December 3, 2005, 05:07 PM | #4 |
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Brenneke slugs are harder (higher antimony content), resist breaking up & flattening, have a much more efficient cookie-cutter nose profile than the rounded Foster style, tend to be pretty accurate, and are among the best shotgun slugs in world.
Just ask your local dealers if they carry the brand, if not, look until you find some. Denis |
December 3, 2005, 11:27 PM | #5 |
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Brenneke slugs,in the ORIGINAL type, are the shiznit and 2 3/4 ones are just as good (and more contollable,cheaper ect) as 3" ones!
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December 4, 2005, 01:09 AM | #6 |
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I have read that the fish & game people in bear country normally carry 12 ga pumps full of Brennekes. They are light, cheap, and powerful. Might be a little scant on penetration. I have heard good things about Remington Copper Solid slugs but they may call for a rifled barrel, I don't know.
I'd rather a .45-70 with the big loads but they are more expensive and maybe less versatile than a shotgun. |
December 4, 2005, 02:51 AM | #7 |
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Here is a gov publication for civilians with defense from bear attacks in mind.
Various calibers tested for penetration. http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/pubs/gtr152.pdf |
December 4, 2005, 04:22 PM | #8 |
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Thanks all!
While I am no expert, the US Forestry Service, Juneau, Alaska, site listed in the posting above, makes some interesting observations on penetration of various projectiles at 15yd/M into a bear hide simulator made of wet silt and sawdust. Penetration of 1oz 12g 2 3/4" slugs is listed as 15 inches, right up there with the .458 Magnum rifle round, albeit with much less velocity. For short range use, I am convinced that 12 g slugs are the way to go! |
December 4, 2005, 06:14 PM | #9 |
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http://www.westernalaskahunting.com/grizzly_hunts.htm
http://www.adventuresinthewild.com/b...ing-alaska.htm Just looking at that thing encourages me to buy a .50 bmg rifle. They have been killed with 45-70 400 grain loads at 1300 fps in the past but when your life is on the line bigger caliber is better. 50 BMG is cheaper since you can buy surplus rounds for 1 to 2 dollars each vs. 2 to 3 dollars for a good 45-70 bear round like buffalo bore or $5 a round for a .458 win magnum factory round. 50 BMG would be the most effective defense round on a grizzly, brown bear, or polar bear. Heres a company that sells a quality .50 BMG for only 2100 dollars http://www.serbu.com/ Barrett rifles are great too but the least expensive single shot is $3600 http://www.barrettrifles.com/ http://www.barrettrifles.com/rifles/rifles_99.htm If it was me, I would have the .50 BMG for my primary defense and for a back up a remington 870 marine magnum loaded with breneke 3 inch slugs packing about 600 grains of lead at 1500 fps. These slugs are much denser that other brands and penetrate very well. http://www.brenneke.de/brenneke_engl/web/start.html |
December 4, 2005, 11:09 PM | #10 | |
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Some thoughts
Quote:
Brennekes are hard, with either a felt stabilizer secured to the base with a screw, as in their 2 3/4" 1 1/8 oz, or a plastic arrangement used in the 1oz. I'm referring to Rottweil brand Brennekes. The attached stabilizers stay with the slug and go into the target. A Brenneke may go into a target at .72 cal and come out the same size. If you had heavy bones to go through and you had a shotgun, then Brennekes will give you the penetration you may need. Only the Sabot is capable of deeper penetration. The Rottweils chrono'd at 1375fps for the 1oz, and 1340 for the 1 1/8 load. This from my 18" Scattergun Tech. They are fairly pleasant to shoot--unlike Federal Classics (Foster type), which belt me pretty good and chrono at 1495 fps. Against something that could eat me for breakfast, I might consider 3" Brennekes and make sure I could shoot them rapidly, though I wouldn't feel underarmed with 2.75". |
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December 5, 2005, 01:58 AM | #11 |
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Another vote for the Brenneke. They are very hard and retain most of their weight. They penentrate very well. Shot one against a steel back stop at an indoor range. The slug pancaked but held together.
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December 6, 2005, 09:24 PM | #12 |
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The brand name of Brenneke is very good, but so are a lot of others...You may use them BUT only as a last resort...and you might want to follow up the second slug with 2 to 4, 00 or 000 or 0000 buckshot loads but don't go any lower in size than 00...this is 2,000+ lbs of enraged muscle and you want all the shock value you can get...buckshot does have the ability to spread its load over a greater area, causing more surface damage but at some penetration loss.
Better check on the legality of that stock in Canada (folding stocks, collapsing stocks some, but not all, of both are illegal)... Get yourself some "Banger" shells, make that a lot...they shoot out an exploding sound blast which when they go off scare the bears away...they work very, very well...we go through 75 to 125 a season at the lodge...then again we are on a polar bear migratory route... You had better be almost in the jaws of that bear before you shoot, because if Environment Canada deems that it was not a legal shoot, you're screwed...they will confiscate ALL of your belongings (maybe return them), fine you and possible jail term...
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December 6, 2005, 09:54 PM | #13 | |
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Quote:
I'd suggest buying a drilling before a .50 maybe a 9.3x74 with 12G, sorry, those are S/S doubles with a single barrel beneath...can be shotgun over rifle or vice versa... The best bear caliber is the one that, if with all the extra recoil, you can shoot well...if that is a bolt action .300 Win Mag, .358 Win Mag, .325 WSM, .375 H&H Mag, 9.3 X 62 etc. it don't matter...what matters is the ability to place 1 or 2 or 3 shots into the vitals without the fear of when you pull the trigger excessive recoil scares you and causes flinching... I carry a .425 Westley Richards bolt gun and one of my partners carries a Z-Hat 1895 Winchester lever rifle in .375 Scoville-Hawk and the other a Marlin lever action in .45/70 Gov. and we donโt feel that under-gunned in any way and these guns are never more than inches away from our hands at all timesโฆand I mean AT ALL times...we also have an electrified perimeter fence with shoot up flares mounted to all the fence posts as an additional warning device and if you're going into polar bear country that is one of the most important items to get and maintain...
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December 9, 2005, 04:41 AM | #14 |
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If you can't find Brenneke slugs in Canada you might want to try Remington Buckhammers. I believe Canadian Tire and other discount stores carry Remington Ammo.
There is a write up on the Buckhammers at <www.stoppingpower.net> click on forums - click on Test Bed then search for slugs. Most authorities use Brenneke, the Buckhammer is new. |
December 11, 2005, 09:10 PM | #15 |
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i dont have any experience with em but those remington buckhammers sound nasty. its a REALLY heavy slug.
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December 12, 2005, 02:41 PM | #16 |
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i don't understand why people like rifles more. it's not like a bear's skin is going to stop a slug. or is someone going to claim it's tougher than ballistic glass? i'd probably bring a 45/70 levergun, .44 mag if i had to be absolutely light, but if weight was no issue and depending on the versatility i needed from a gun in the bush i'd probably go with one of my super-mag chambered shotguns.
http://www.theboxotruth.com/docs/bot6.htm |
December 12, 2005, 11:23 PM | #17 |
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protection from bears
I would not use any slugs smaller than a 12 ga 3-1/2 inch slugs
better safe than sorry |
December 14, 2005, 09:54 AM | #18 |
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Well now! There have been some interesting answers posted here, but I wonder how much is based ao actual experience.
The British solved this problem man years ago with the famous Paradox 12 bore (some bigger) firearms. The original blackpowder load was a hard .730"-730 gr solid slug/bullet at a velocity of 1000'/". Later on the smokeless load went to 1200'/" With today's rifled barrel and modern pump guns we have an ultra bore rifle on a shotgun frame. This becomes the ideal close in setup for dangerous game...if loaded with the proper ammo. Soft slugs is not the answer and even the Brenneke is not quite hard enough. What is needed the a .730"-730 gr hard cast alloy slug/bullet that is heat treated. These can be found at Dixie Slugs. John Linebaugh/Todd Corder tested the Terminator (1200'/"), the Express (1300'/"), and the Xterminator (1400'/") in the "Bone Box" and got up to 30"+ penetration without blowning up the slug!. These are designed for rifled barrels. Take a look at Dixie Slugs (dixieslugs.com) or contact James Gates ([email protected]) for more details.
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December 15, 2005, 06:47 PM | #19 |
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good choice, myself I would have went with an 8 shot remington 870 or ihaca 37, but thats just me. remington sluggers shoot good. I have heard of alternating slugs and buckshot for charging bear, I'm not sure if your planning on using this as a defense gun or as a primary close range weapon. good luck, and keep us updated.
.44MS P.S a remington 7600 in 30-06 sprg. would work good aswell. PSS, if you were using this gun for defense i'd refrain from using a red dot, batteries die at the worst moments, and also, in the adrenaline you may forget to flip on the switch, not that you'd really have time to turn in on anyway. |
December 15, 2005, 07:39 PM | #20 |
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if i had to face down a bear, all i'd need is around a 9mm.
that's cause i'm not shootin the bear............... ---->
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December 16, 2005, 12:51 AM | #21 |
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45-70 Gov't
The above referenced article on the suitablility and effectiveness of different cartridges on bear was interesting. The text mentioned that the .45-70 would be more effective if better bullets were available.
Wouldn't reloaders have the answer to this? They have more projectiles available and can crank up the the velocity in a strong rifle. They left out an important cartridge too. The .17HMR. That round could really teach a bear a lesson. |
December 16, 2005, 12:56 AM | #22 | |
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Quote:
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December 16, 2005, 02:20 AM | #23 |
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If all you had was a 17 HMR your only chance might be to shoot both bear eyes out. The 17 HMR into a bears eye would destroy eye tissue pretty bad its actually perfect for that tactic. Buck shot might be good for such a thing too. If you can hit clays with a shotgun a bears eye is smaller.
Whatever it takes to keep you alive i guess. The you can get a real bear caliber and end the bear misery. |
December 16, 2005, 07:00 PM | #24 |
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honestly, i'd get the biggest, heaviest, fastest slug i could. A shorty shotgun will be easier to take with you (cause the big .50 bmg you left in the truck does squat when a bear is after you) and you can but quite a few rounds in one with an extended tube.
Just remember, you don't have to outrun the bear, just the slowest person your with.
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December 16, 2005, 07:00 PM | #25 |
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how about the .416 rubgy round. I saw one at the range.... it's around 400 grains.
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