Well, it was a 10 gauge."the outlaw was almost cut in two by a round of buckshot to the stomach."
Well, it was a 10 gauge."the outlaw was almost cut in two by a round of buckshot to the stomach."
A 10 double load of dimes could probably buy some shotguns.In the movies they did.
I don't know if they really did.
No. They did not.morning, back in the day did not they use dimes in the shotgun
loads instead of buckshot??? justme gbot tum
FYI - chaps have no ass to start with.Hell no.
You’d spend it on a pair of leather chaps with the ass cut out of them.
I had a neighbor when I lived in Dallas that loaded up dimes for his 12 ga. claimed they were devastating at short range, but expensive. I think it was 15 dimes to a load.The dimes in a shotshell is Hollywood boolshite.
1.) Nobody would waste coin like that.
2.) Ballistic performance is very poor.
Breach loaders had ready made shells.
Muzzleloaders would use nails or stones if shot ran out.
I had a neighbor when I lived in Dallas that loaded up dimes for his 12 ga. claimed they were devastating at short range, but expensive. I think it was 15 dimes to a load.
$1.80 is expensive for a shotgun round today, do you really think they would spend that much "back in the day"? Especially when shot is more effective.morning, back in the day did not they use dimes in the shotgun
loads instead of buckshot??? justme gbot tum
Before I left the northwest I had another pair (not insulated), they would probably be about that old or older today. I had limited room to store stuff on my bike when I left, a second pair of chaps didn't make the cut.My chaps are abt 25 years old and getting worn but still usable. There was no cutout needed, they didn't cover the butt. Don't fit as well as they did either????