• In Stock

    LuckyGunner.com has a live inventory system that removes any out-of-stock items from our website the moment the last unit is ordered.
    If you see it, we have it in stock and ready to ship.

  • Fast Shipping
  • $100 Guarantee

    We guarantee the products shown on our site are in-stock. If we make a mistake and an item in your order is out of stock, we will give you a $100 store credit.

20 Gauge - 3" 250 Grain TTSX Sabot Slug - Remington Premier Expander - 5 Rounds

Out of stock

Overview

Quantity - 5 Rounds
Manufacturer - Remington
Load - 3” 250 Grain TTSX Sabot Slug
Manufacturer Remington
Condition New
Bullet Weight 250 Grain
Bullet Type Tipped Triple-Shock X
Quantity 5
Ammo Caliber 20 Gauge
Manufacturer SKU PRX20M
Shell Length 3"
Muzzle Velocity (fps) 1900
Muzzle Energy (ft lbs) 2004
Attracts Magnet No
UPC Barcode 047700527307
Use Type
Sabot Slug
See More Information
If you go hunting for deer or hog with 20 Gauge in hand, then you need no finer ammunition than Remington’s Premier Expander. This shell’s 250 grain sabot slug combines tack driving accuracy with savage terminal performance to sweep your quarry off its hooves!

This shell features a TTSX projectile. Precision machined from pure copper, it is both aerodynamic and balanced. With a 3” shell’s boosted muzzle velocity of 1,900 fps it gives you a sweet .179 ballistic coefficient – that conveys about 1.5” of drop at 100 yards coupled with 1,280 ft lbs of critter-blasting energy!

The TTSX terminates its flat trajectory with ruinous expansion. Its streamlined polymer tip is rested atop the brim of a deep nose cavity, into which it rams at high speed to commence rapid expansion. The TTSX takes the shape of a six-pointed star as it opens up, each point a sharp cutting petal that sinks through tough muscle fibers like a hot knife through margarine. The TTSX’s rugged copper composition also promotes superb weight retention, enabling it to consistently reach the depths where vitals are positioned.

Please note: This is a sabot slug, and accordingly demands to be fired out of a rifled bore shotgun. A smoothbore shotgun will not correctly stabilize this shell’s projectile, granting it poor accuracy and virtually zero chance of expanding following impact.
© 2009-2024 LuckyGunner, LLC.

All Rights Reserved. | Site Map