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Picture Page May 2013 A box of Crossman Skeet Shells...........
I recently picked up a few boxes of .380 plastic shot shells, made for use in the short-lived Crosman Series 1100 Trapmaster shotgun. It is a full size shotgun, and looks much like the Remington Model 1100 shotgun, which it copied. Introduced in 1968 and out of production by 1971, this shotgun was powered by two CO2 'powerlets'. The Trapmaster has two power levels, based on the degree to which it is cocked. When loaded with two new 12-gram powerlets, it will provide around 30 shots at the high power level, at a velocity of 450 to 500 feet per second. Obviously, it will deliver more shots at a lower velocity if fired at the low power level. As they are fired using CO2, these shells have no powder or primer, just a plastic hull with a load of just over 60 grains of #8 shot held in place by a paper base wad and a plastic mouth wad. Once fired, they can be reloaded multiple times, but eventually the hulls will split, after which they can no longer be used. Shown below is a 1968 Crosman Trapmaster ad. . .
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