Some say that the 12-gauge shotgun is the most versatile firearm ever made, something I happen to agree with. You can rely on a 12 gauge when hunting anything from deer to birds. Many people don’t give shotguns the attention they deserve, instead focusing on rifles, and forgetting the sheer utility of a good scattergun. I want to take a look at five shotguns every shooter should put some shells through.
A slightly younger entry into the pump shotgun market—and one of my personal favorites—is the Mossberg 500 series of shotguns. The 500 series rivals the 870 in many ways, but I feel it has a bit of an edge on a couple of fronts. The ejector is not riveted in place making it easy to replace if for some reason you damage yours. The controls are also in a more convenient location for some shooters. The 500 series is the number one selling shotgun at of the time as of this writing and second to the 870 in overall production, earning this shotgun a place on the list of must shoots.
The Mossberg 930 is a value-priced autoloader that has no trouble keeping up with your trigger finger. A favorite of pro-shooter Jerry Miculek, it shouldn’t be overlooked when you shop for a semi auto shotgun. The 930 is offered in several configurations that serve hunters with more traditional style layouts to ultra-customized 3-gun style builds such as the 930 JM Pro (the JM being a hat tip to Jerry Miculek). With the price of entry into a 930 being roughly the same as a 590A1, it is tough to beat one of the more popular gas breathers on the market.
When it comes to long guns, nothing says Old West quite like a side-by-side 12 gauge with exposed hammers. When getting behind one of these there is just something about breaking the action in half, sliding two powerful shells into the chamber, closing the shotgun back up, pulling back the hammers and letting the shotgun loose. I highly recommend taking the time to connect with your inner Doc Holliday and spending an afternoon reenacting the gunfight at the OK Corral against paper Tom McLaury targets.
Hugely popular in Australia as a result of their overreaching gun laws, the 1887-pattern shogun is the first truly successful repeating shotgun that was introduced. The great gun designer John Moses Browning designed the firearm for the Winchester Company at their request for a lever-action shotgun because they were a lever gun company. The 1887-pattern shotgun not only has an interesting way of cycling the gun, but the way it loads is like no other shotgun on the market. If shooting lever-action rifles is something you enjoy, you will love shooting a lever-action shotgun.
There you have it; five shotguns you need to shoot. Now it is up to you folks to get out to the range and get familiar with some of these iconic boomsticks.
This post originally was run on The Shooter’s Log– http://blog.cheaperthandirt.com/5-shotguns-shoot-die/
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