Well, finally a subject I've had lots of experience with. I have shot literally
thousands of handloaded shot shells in .38, .357, .44 spc., and .44 mag. and .45 ACP. I've killed rats, snakes, rabbits stray kitties, possums, coons, squirrels, snapping turtles, bats, well you get the picture. Biggest 2 factors in effectiveness is bore size and shot size. The .44 mag loaded with #4 shot will kill rabbits at 10 yards, even a might further if you get a lucky pellet in. For those of y'all what don't hunt bunnies, it only takes one pellet anywhere in the head and a bunny bites the dirt. Tree rats sre tough so keep the shots close as possible. The plastic SPEER shot capsules will not hurt your barrel. They will leave some plastic residue if you shoot enough of em, but it cleans out with a brush real easy. A good everyday shot size is 7 1/2 or # 6's. I have a few pounds of #12 shot that produces a good pattern but the dust size shot lacks the weight to be deadly past 10 or so feet, does make a fine snake-up-close round. I've bought bags of shot but everyone I know has old shotgun shells laying around, more than enough to keep me in shot. The .22 and .38 are just so-so in power. Many rats I've shot with .38's will just give you a dirty look when hit, they just die with the same shot size from my SBH. I've harvested 200+ rats this year along from the barn. Night shooting with a head mounted light is real fun. Last thing I shoud mention is barrel lenght (according to SPEER manual) makes no difference, Horse Pucky!! .44's from my 7 something inch Ruger kills lots better than the same rounds from a 2 inch snub. oh yeh, don't try to push the loads above listed cause it affects the shot pattern. It gets crazy if you put to much UMPH behind them. Midway will sell you all the empty shot caps you want. Good luck and have fun!
Rick
