In what (fictional) tactical scenerios would a doubled-barreled shotgun be superior?

Oh, I’ve long said the proper tool for hunting Jedi is a shotgun. And really, recoil is pretty dependent on the action. My single barrel break is probably the worst possible shotgun for recoil, followed by a double barrel, followed by pump. Semi and automatic are actually pretty trivial that way.

Why would that be the case? Does the action absorb a truly significant amount of the recoil?

In self-loaders, some of the recoil is absorbed by the reloading operation, but “fixed-breech” (single/double barrel) shotguns do seem to kick more for some reason. I can only surmise it might be something to do with the comb of the stock, which is different on most fixed-breech and repeating shotguns, at least in my experience.

You two are discussing different guns.

The M3 “Grease Gun”, introduced in 1942, is a submachine gun in .45 ACP which was one of the guns issued to tankers in WWII.

The M3 Carbine (in .30 Carbine), introduced in 1945, is a select-fire version of the M1 carbine fitted with an infrared scope.

What, no mention of wabbit hunting?!

If you can work, “A’hm thinkin! And it hurts.” into that, I’ll buy it.
Of course that means Bugs has to be Darth Bugs…:slight_smile:
HOw can he eat carrots through that helmet?

Noo wait, Bugs would be a Rebel…But Bugs Vader or Darth Bugs would be so cool…

carnivorousplant said:

That was my point exactly. A semi-auto or auto has rechambering before you can get the barrel back down, nevermind aim again.

Malthus said:

I shot a 20 gauge as a teen, haven’t shot any shotguns in ages, so I can’t compare by experience. My expectation is that any kick is going to rough up your aim, but I could be wrong.

carnivorousplant said:

It’s not swinging it around all day, it’s keeping it from moving when it fires. I want to be convinced that someone build like a tree can get off 2 good shots from a DB faster than with a 20 gauge semi-auto.

I was being polite, adding verisimilitude to an otherwise bland and uninteresting narrative. I agree with you that it would be necessary to aim again, even with something small. It takes me a couple of seconds to be able to see again after firing a 12 ga. :slight_smile: