The Power Calls 21271 Megawatt delivers authentic mallard hen vocalizations through precision-tuned single reed construction. This stealth black acrylic call produces the realistic feeding chuckles, comeback calls, and lonesome hen sounds that bring ducks into range when traditional calls fall short.
What Makes This Different
The Megawatt's single reed design eliminates the tuning complications of double reed calls while maintaining tonal versatility across the full range of mallard hen sounds. Black acrylic construction provides superior durability compared to wood calls that crack in wet conditions. The open-end design allows for precise air control and volume modulation that multi-reed calls cannot match.
Key Features
- Single reed system for consistent tone production and easy operation
- Black acrylic construction resists moisture, temperature changes, and impact damage
- Open call design enables volume control from soft feeding calls to loud comeback calls
- Stealth black finish reduces glare and visibility in hunting situations
- Precision-machined sound board optimizes air flow and tonal quality
- Compact profile fits standard lanyards and call bags
- No-maintenance reed system eliminates field adjustments
Field performance centers on the call's ability to produce authentic mallard hen sounds across varying wind conditions and distances. The single reed responds immediately to air pressure changes, allowing hunters to transition seamlessly from soft feeding murmurs to aggressive comeback calls. The acrylic material maintains consistent tone in freezing temperatures where wooden calls often fail or change pitch.
Technical Specs
- Construction: Black acrylic body and insert
- Reed configuration: Single reed system
- Call type: Open end mallard hen call
- Finish: Stealth black non-reflective surface
- Model: 21271 Megawatt
- Manufacturer: Power Calls
- UPC: 710617212719
- Sound range: Feeding chuckles to long-range comeback calls
The Megawatt addresses the common frustration of calls that work in calm conditions but fail when wind picks up or birds hang up at distance. Professional guides and tournament callers choose single reed designs for their reliability and tonal range when consistent performance matters most.