Hevi Shot or Remington Hyper Sonic Pros and Cons?

Kristan

Well-known member
I am looking to try hunting with either the Hevi Shot/Steel or Remington Hyper Sonic this year with my 20 gauge...Has anyone hunted with either...What are the pros and cons of the shots...I know they are both pricey is it worth changing from the current steel loads I am using?

The scope of hunting will be ducks during the season and then move into snow geese in the spring....

Regards,

Kristan
 
Being louder makes sense being that the velocity is higher, a simple aspect of physics....Was there a difference you noticed in the effectiveness of birds dead on arrival or still kicking after they touched down...

Regards,

Kristan
 
Hypersonic knocks'em out cold, but like all Remington ammunition, it shoots dirty. Hevi-shot/Hevi-steel are way to expensive for my tastes, not when my Winchesters kill'em over the decoys at half the price. Everybody wants high velocity/long range ammo. I don't care what you shoot, if a duck is 40+yrds, you're not doing it right. Feet down over the decoys and a 4-10 will kill them. Less cripples and less educating birds.
 
i used hyper sonic last year I didnt see a hugh difference like davey said if they are close enough any shell will do I like the kent fast steel its 1560fps and 13.99 a box not to much slower then the 1700fps of the hypersonic and almost $10 cheaper
 
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Kristan,

For several years I have used my 20 ga. SxS more and last year it was my only gun for the whole season. I shot a record number of ducks (for me) as well as two geese. The ducks were 70% divers and I had fewer cripples than usual. My load of choice is Kent Fasteel, 20 ga., 3", #4's for all ducks and 3" HeviShot #2's for geese though #4's would work too. My chokes are IC in the right barrel and MOD in the left. With HeviShot the MOD choke is really too tight but it will sure put the lights out on a bird that's hit as well as a long range cripple smacker.

This year I'm using my 28 ga. so far and shooting either #7 1/2 or #6 HeviShot. So far, no cripples.
 
It's not the ammo you asked about--but it is Remington . . . . .

I have 6 Wingmaster HD shells (12 gauge, 3 inch, 1 3/8 oz #6's) that haven't gone off in my gun this year. Strong firing pin marks on the primer, but the shell didn't fire. Had the same thing happen at least twice last year, maybe on shells out of the same box. Given that the damn things sell for around $2.50 a shell, it's annoying. I'm pretty sure it's a box I've had around since last season--maybe even the season before.

I don't think it's a firing pin issue, as every other shell I feed the gun fires just fine. When I'm feeling crotchety I'm inclined to mail the damn things back to Remington and ask for my money back. I have another 10 shells or so of the same stuff, and now I don't want to put it in my gun for fear it won't go off. Those are expensive shells to use for finishing off cripples or any other situation where a click instead of a bang won't mean a lost bird.

I've also had a couple of other Remington HD shells that went off but with a muffled pop. In one case the wad and shot went out the barrel and I saw it fall in the marsh in front of me; it the other case the wad ended up stuck in my barrel. Fortunately I did not pull the trigger on a second shot!

All of this is just ranting, since it looks like Remington is no longer selling any heavier than lead shells.

As for its effect on ducks, I really like both the Remington HD and Hevi shot for hunting hard-to-kill birds and/or taking longer shots. I tend to hoard it for late season goldeneyes on the salt. It seems to give me fewer cripples than steel. For puddle ducks over decoys, steel seems to work just fine for me when I do my part and hit the bird.

For smaller birds, the heavier than lead shells can be overkill. I pretty much vaporized a sora rail on a close range shot with a load of #7 Hevishot out of my 20 gauge last year. I suspect a close shot on teal might have a similar result.
 
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Kent Fasteel in 3" #2's out of that 20 ga will knock down everything you need it to.

We passed a 20 ga. around on a goose hunt last January and had no problem putting them down properly out to 35yds.

Shoot a tight choke and aim for the head.

-D
 
Jeff,

Similar thing happened on Sat. Had a Woodie come over at maybe 30 yds and took it with the modified barrel of my 28 ga. with #6 Hevishot. 14 holes in the breast. I had forgotten that I had the MOD barrel up first.
 
I agree with the other guys, save the money; if the birds are really in 20 gauge range, then a good standard 3" steel load is all you need.
 
Kristan,

Last season I tried a box of the Remington Hypersonic in #4, 3-inch shells for a 12 guage. My shoulder hates me for it. I do not like shooting those things. Still have about a half box left. Once it's gone, I don't wish to try any hypersonic shells again.

Of course, that leaves the question of what I do wish to try. Still thinking about that one.
 
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Thanks everybody...I have used my 20 gauge for near 7 years now through out the diver season...Just wondering if it is worth it to move up to a faster shell...Sounds like the consensus is to stay with what I normally shoot...In some cases even smaller sizes than listed...

Thanks a bunch, money saved...Stomachs to fill with duck meat this season...

Regards,

Kristan
 
I shoot both and both are effective. Hevi Shot is better.

2 3/4" 12 gauge loads in pretty much any configuration are usually cheaper then 3" 20 gauge loads in the the same configuration. I would just shoot the 12 gauge.
 
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