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The issue with bismuth is that it is a very brittle metal unless alloyed correctly. Rotometals sells alloyed pellets that are pliable enough to compress with pliers. If I were going to cast bismuth round balls, I would use the Rotometal shot as a source and test it on a stack of wet newspaper or a pork shoulder for penetration and fragmentation.
I have used 5% tin alloyed bismuth pellets dropped into shot. They were terribly fragile. I suspect that the molten metal hardens too much if dropped into cool water. Dropping into warmed oil makes more sense. With a cast ball, as long as the mold is preheated well, a slow cool should maintain the softness.
 
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I'd say it would be terrain/range dependent. I have a buddy that literally has dozens, if not hundreds, of turkeys cruising through his property daily. He could pretty much drop a rock on their heads and have turkey for dinner any time desired.
 
I setup a T/C encore with a 24" 12 ga barrel for turkeys very light easy to carry and short overall length, first round with a 3" turkey load about ripped my index finger off with the front swivel, went back to using my Benelli with a 26" barrel.
 
Metro barrel extensions. Can always use it as a pole for salmon fishing if it doesn't work.

View: https://youtu.be/uOIsvwHxufg?si=nLN4VUQ97S8eEUPe

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