LIGHTFIELD HYBRED Exp Lite 12Ga 2 3/4" 5/36
For Devastating Deer Performance, Turn To The Lightfield Ammunition Corporation For The hardest Hitting And Most Accurate Sabot Slug Available. 2-3/4" Exp Cartridges Have a Two-Sided Sabot That keys To Four tabs On The Slug Itself. When The Shell Is Fired The Pressure pushes The Wad Forward, Locking The Slug And Sabot Together, And forces The Locked Sabot/Slug Assembly To Expand To The Full Barrel Diameter And Spin Together as One Unit. Just Like a Badminton Birdie, The Lighter Wad Or "Shuttlecock" stays Attached To The Slug While In Flight, Giving The Projectile Stability While Supersonic And prevents Shockwave Deflection When The Projectile becomes Subsonic. Upon Impact, The Maximum Expansion Of The Soft Lead Slug (Essentially a .62 Cal. Bullet) produces devastatingly Lethal results
Mfg: Lightfield Ammo
Model: LFL12
SKU: BH_LF LFL12
Specification |
|
Value |
Gauge |
|
12 Gauge |
Shell Length |
|
2-3/4" |
Shot Type |
|
Slug |
Shot Size |
|
Slug |
Shot Weight |
|
1-1/4 oz |
Power |
|
Standard |
|
|
|
MFG NO |
|
LFL12 |
SKU |
|
1079939 |
UPC |
|
784268122758 |
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
12 gauge is the most popular and useful shotgun gauges ever made. Suitable for everything from doves to geese. With sporting, military and law enforcement applications. Available in 2 ¾”, 3” and 3 ½”. The magnum lengths are generally preferred for waterfowl and turkey. Most major manufacturers produce guns and ammunition in a very wide septum for 12 gauge. Loads from ¾ oz. to 2 oz. are common with 1 1/8 oz Low base and 1 ¼ oz being the most common loadings. Target loads are normally around 1150 to 1200 FPS with High velocity lead loads tuning up 1350 FPS. Steel waterfowl loads tend to be loaded faster around 1500 FPS to compensate lower density shot. While the 2 ¾” loading is still the most popular ammunition made, nearly all current production guns have 3”or 3 ½” chambers. The shorter ammunition can be safely fired in longer chambers, but not all magnum semiautomatics will function with shorter shotshells. —
Craig Boddington
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