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TheFirearmsForum.com
FOUNDED: February 9, 2001 |
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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 24
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On a box of shotgun shells.....what does 3 3/4 DR. EQ represent?
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#2 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 3,113
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http://www.shotgunworld.com/amm.html
this site has just about everything you need for shotgun stuff.
__________________
"Loud noises don't end gunfights.... well placed shots do."
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#3 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: NW Florida
Posts: 8,662
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1 dram is 1/16 of a ounce. Black powder shotshells used to be loaded with so-many drams of powder.
People that shot a lot of shotshells knew how powerful a shell loaded with 2 3/4 drams of powder, or 3 1/8 drams of powder were. When smokeless powder came along, you did not use anywhere near as much of the smokeless as you did the black, to get the same ballistics. The manufacturers started marking the boxes with "dram equivalent", so the buyers would know what the performance was. One dram of powder was 27.3 grains, so a standard load of 3 drams is 82 grains. The actual charge of smokeless might be 25 grains. Putting that on the box would just confuse the buyer. So they would mark the box 3.0 Dram Equivalent, or 3 Dr Eq. This let the buyer know that it was equivalent to having a shell loaded with 3 drams, or 82 grains, of black powder. Nowadays nobody knows what that means. When I started with shotguns, in the 70s, all it meant to me was 3 1/4 dr eq was a more powerful load than 3 dr eq. The makers still put it on the boxes, out of habit. Some makers, though, have started putting velocities on the box.
__________________
Meddle not in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy, and taste good with catsup - George of Lod, Year of Our Lord 297 I always take precautions. Beware the Evil Bullet Fairies.
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