which choke came on the winchester ranger 120?

Astocks2622

New member
I am looking at buying a youth model winchester ranger 120 20 ga locally for my wife & kids to use. the current owner got it from his father & doesn't know what choke it has. it's a fixed choke barrel obviously.
Just wondering if anyone knows what they came with originally. Down the road I can pick up a winchoke barrel for it for turkey & such, but just curious about whats on the gun now.
 
ok, looks like it is a modified choke. also, I got about 150 shells with it, including some really old winchester loads. about half of the winchester stuff has small splits about 1/4" long about 3/8" back from the crimp. is that stuff all a loss, or is it safe to shoot?
 
yeah, they are winchester 3" #4 20 ga. the plastic hull on a bunch have 1-2 small lengthwise splits. maybe i can get some pics up after church this morning.
 
Those are gonna HURT!

As far as the wife and kids, remember that a lighter 20, especially with some heavy loads can have MORE recoil than a heavier 12, so get light target loads to start.
 
^ Especially if that is buckshot instead of bird shot, and it sounds like it is buck

I don't know enough about ammunition to opine as to safety, but I wonder whether those splits in the casing could result in a failure to load or eject. That may turn on the cause of the tears and even the hulls composition (paper or plastic). I wouldn't risk them in a defense gun, and perhaps not for hunting, but blowing up targets why not.
 
Last edited:
I would bet money those are reloads. I had shells with no powder in them, but never splits in new factory W-W shells, and I have some that are probably 50 years old. Had a lot of reloads split.
 
Ok, here are some pics. the ones that are split are definitely factory. don't know of any home brew crimps like this...
2nibif7.jpg

n6amuu.jpg

however, looking more closely at some of the other ammo I got with the deal, I'm pretty sure there are some reloads in there. some look like they've got a few drops of candle wax or something over the crimp...
anyway, these won't be the ones that the wife or kids will touch off first. was planning on some 2 3/4" 3/4 oz 7.5 shot loads for that.
 
Those look like they should, if they are 3 inchers, be factory loads with 1-1/4 ounce of #4 birdshot. I would use them for practice only. You could hunt with them, if they don't fail to feed or eject, but unless you have no other option I would go with new ammo for that. I wouldn't use it for defense for two reasons. That is when you don't want a failure and most would agree that #4 bird shot is a poor home defense or tactical round.
 
No chance i'd use them for defense. the remington 1100 w/ 20" barrel & 00 Buck gets the nod in the home, along with a sidearm. mostly was trying to see if they were still safe to shoot up. I can get some decent #6 loads for grouse/rabbit & #1's for defense (couldn't find any 20 ga shells with larger shot than that).
 
Back
Top