With the debate that is going on about lead shot, I checked my Browning 425 for proof marks for steel shot - there are none.
However, the other day I got out the case that came with the gun (I bought it secondhand and had put the case in the attic), and I found tucked in with the guarantee certificate, a card that states that Browning certifies that the B425 'may be used with steel shot ordinary cartridges that meet the CIP standard', qualified that I had to be using the removable Invector chokes that came with the gun.
I'm not about to start wildfowling any time soon, but am intrigued by this. Presumably Browning mean standard performance cartridges, but a high-performance one would be a no-no?
Is this safe, or will I ruin my barrels, putting steel shot down them, if there are no proof marks? If the card hadn't mentioned the model of gun by name, I might have thought the cases had been mixed up at the dealers, but it does state 'B425'.
However, the other day I got out the case that came with the gun (I bought it secondhand and had put the case in the attic), and I found tucked in with the guarantee certificate, a card that states that Browning certifies that the B425 'may be used with steel shot ordinary cartridges that meet the CIP standard', qualified that I had to be using the removable Invector chokes that came with the gun.
I'm not about to start wildfowling any time soon, but am intrigued by this. Presumably Browning mean standard performance cartridges, but a high-performance one would be a no-no?
Is this safe, or will I ruin my barrels, putting steel shot down them, if there are no proof marks? If the card hadn't mentioned the model of gun by name, I might have thought the cases had been mixed up at the dealers, but it does state 'B425'.