Every so often, in various stories, I see references to a ".12 gauge" shotgun. I've always assumed that was sloppy editing or typesetting, if not writing.
But then I became curious: What would the bore diameter of a .12 gauge shotgun be?
Shotgun gauges (other than .410) are a function of the weight of a lead round ball of the diameter of the shotgun's bore. Simply put, it is how many such round balls it would take to equal a pound. A 12 gauge means that it would take twelve such balls. So 1 pound of pure lead = 1/x, where "x" ix the gauge number.
First off, a ".12 gauge" shotgun would throw a 8.3 lb ball of lead.
There is, of course, an equation for the bore diameter. It is the inverse of the cube root of the gauge number, times 1.66992. Running that on a .12 gauge gives a bore diameter of 3.38".
Which would be one hell of a gun to shoot from the shoulder.
A different formula from Wikipedia yields the same result, with "n" as the bore number.
The Price is WRONG.
28 minutes ago
4 comments:
3.38" is pretty close to 88mm ...
I've seen ".45 mm pistol" once or twice...
Make a good punt gun on a raft like commercial hunters did around the turn of the century for waterfowl.
Eck!
Eck beat me to it, that's a Punt gun!!! NOT going to shoot it from the shoulder if you want to KEEP the shoulder attached...
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