Recommend me a shotgun
Discussion
I did a piece of work recently outside of normal hours and have just been paid for it. I treat this as "free" money so it's for spending
Just bought Mrs Drams a new Omega and had a trip to Glendronach today to start spending it.
Anyway, I quite fancy splashing out on a dedicated clay gun (something that my boy can inherit) and looking for some advice. I have two local shops but I'm looking for long-term owners advice, not salesmen.
I've already got a 12b Mossberg 500, a very old 20b english s/s (worth £100 if I'm lucky) and, my best "shooting" gun, a 12b remington s/a.
I've not done much formal clay shooting, a mate has a trap and I've put thousands of cartridges through my guns at his place. I do need some proper lessons though I think! Anyway, the point is, I haven't decided on a specific discipline yet so I don't want anything too specialised.
12b, O/U, probably 30". Multi-choke obviously, probably something fairly traditional (although I saw a chap using a synthetic Browning Cynergy the other day and it looked rather tasty!). Budget around £2k.
Ta
Just bought Mrs Drams a new Omega and had a trip to Glendronach today to start spending it. Anyway, I quite fancy splashing out on a dedicated clay gun (something that my boy can inherit) and looking for some advice. I have two local shops but I'm looking for long-term owners advice, not salesmen.
I've already got a 12b Mossberg 500, a very old 20b english s/s (worth £100 if I'm lucky) and, my best "shooting" gun, a 12b remington s/a.
I've not done much formal clay shooting, a mate has a trap and I've put thousands of cartridges through my guns at his place. I do need some proper lessons though I think! Anyway, the point is, I haven't decided on a specific discipline yet so I don't want anything too specialised.
12b, O/U, probably 30". Multi-choke obviously, probably something fairly traditional (although I saw a chap using a synthetic Browning Cynergy the other day and it looked rather tasty!). Budget around £2k.
Ta
Romanymagic said:
sherman said:
Romanymagic said:
My money would be on a Beretta Silver Pigeon, looking around £1500 to secure!
My dads got a silver pigeon on order just now for £1350 (before trade in).Edited by sherman on Wednesday 16th June 23:12
not cluny claysEdited by sherman on Wednesday 16th June 23:15
My bettinsoli diamond was good because I bought it new for a bargain price, but it not any thing special or worth recommending.
My dad has a Beretta 686 and it is a fantastic gun, it is designed for clay shooting so it is quite heavy but it means you can shoot all day with out getting a stiff shoulder.
Dont buy new as you will more than likely loose money on it, if you go for a good used one it will more than likely gain value over a few years.
My dad has a Beretta 686 and it is a fantastic gun, it is designed for clay shooting so it is quite heavy but it means you can shoot all day with out getting a stiff shoulder.
Dont buy new as you will more than likely loose money on it, if you go for a good used one it will more than likely gain value over a few years.
Hi
Silver Pigeon whilst a good all round gun is a little light for a dedicated clay buster. My money would be on either a MK38 Gr3 or MK60 Universal if you prefer a Browning style action or for a lower profiled gun a secondhand 682 Gold E, Blaser F3 or with a bit of luck you should be able to find a Gamba Daytona around that price point which is a very underated tool.
Alternatively sell a kidney and buy yourself a Perazzi, you know it makes sense.
Regards
Silver Pigeon whilst a good all round gun is a little light for a dedicated clay buster. My money would be on either a MK38 Gr3 or MK60 Universal if you prefer a Browning style action or for a lower profiled gun a secondhand 682 Gold E, Blaser F3 or with a bit of luck you should be able to find a Gamba Daytona around that price point which is a very underated tool.
Alternatively sell a kidney and buy yourself a Perazzi, you know it makes sense.
Regards
Franchi all day long.
Now owned by berreta so their mechanisms are the same but the blueing is far better on the barrels.
My father's one must be 30 years old and it's still tight and looks like new.
Mines about ten years old so barely broken in - gets used in rain, snow and sunshine.
Now owned by berreta so their mechanisms are the same but the blueing is far better on the barrels.
My father's one must be 30 years old and it's still tight and looks like new.
Mines about ten years old so barely broken in - gets used in rain, snow and sunshine.
Essentially the barrels will be different.
Field guns have the joint filled in which strengthens them as it lives a harder life. The comp guns just have small fillets between the barrels to make them lighter and therefore pointier.
There's other differences but I can't be arsed to get the book out as I'm in the garden enjoying a cider.
Field guns have the joint filled in which strengthens them as it lives a harder life. The comp guns just have small fillets between the barrels to make them lighter and therefore pointier.
There's other differences but I can't be arsed to get the book out as I'm in the garden enjoying a cider.
One's an alicione which they don't make anymore and the other is a side lock I had commissioned - like a glove...
I went to their factory in Brescia last year and given the choice over one of their guns or a B I'd still have a franchi
if you can find one local to you, even secondhand, I'd suggest you have a look - you'll be surprised
I went to their factory in Brescia last year and given the choice over one of their guns or a B I'd still have a franchi
if you can find one local to you, even secondhand, I'd suggest you have a look - you'll be surprised
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