I understand the being shorted argument of 248 vs 200. That is a big jump in payload on target, I’m a 20g shooter, so that would be a huge loss.
A couple things to consider:
-that BB count might be for a specific BB size/load and the marketing team isn’t tracking that on the load you bought.
-Depending on the bismuth source, they might be getting more of a #4.5 or #4 size pellet (USA sizing vs Euro), not that it justifies the incorrect marketing.
-average BB diameter and average load weight would be the great decider of the argument. It would tell you truly where they are coming up short, in the shot size or the load size.
Regardless, hopefully you find some resolution and end up happy with a type of biz.
And last question, have you tried to shoot birds with it yet? Does it hit as hard as the marketing says?
Alright, borrowed a scale from an friend and weighed payloads. 1.25 oz should be roughly 35 grams and average of three shells was 34 with a scale standard error of 2 grams. They aren’t shorting payloads.View attachment 791257
I’d be measuring the pellets to see what size they actually are and weighing to verify the pellet loads.
Same stuff. Nice bird to boot.Same stuff?
I was buying Hevi Shot till I cut one open.
That load looked like something a pre schooler made
or welding flux.
Now I'm wanting to cut open a round of these Federal Bismuths
I been stocking up on. But these things are $$$$!!!!
Did you measure the shot diameter?Same stuff. Nice bird to boot.
I’m not insinuating 4 shot won’t kill a pheasant or duck. In fact, it’ll knock the dust out of them.
But I didn’t pay for 4 shot. I paid for 5 and they sold me 4 and called it 5.