I may be moving to a place where large animals like to eat/trample people; so, I suppose this would be mostly to keep around for that (day-to-day and camping, though the vast majority of the time I would be inside so I wouldn't necessarily need something with a lot of rounds; and as for camping I am also planning out a handgun, which now in Chicago will have to wait til this silly little business gets resolved)....Rev Rob wrote:Quick question Bob, just what do plan on using this shot gun for? If you are going deer hunting and need a slug gun the 12 gauge Remington 870 or Winchester pump would serve you well.
....and fun times shooting.The Stoeger coach double barrel shot gun is only going to be useful in cowboy action shooting where period pieces are called for - single action revolvers, Winchester lever action rifles and a double barrel shot gun.



I think I came clean in my first post, but to be clear I've never fired a shot gun.Also, if you have not shot a 12 gauge very often, you will have to get used to the recoil. Even if you are shooting trap or skeet with trap loads, if you do not have the shot gun mounted correctly on your shoulder when you pull the trigger - you will have a bruised and sore shoulder. I've been there and done that. A .410 can give you the same amount of fun but with less kick - it will be an excellent slug gun for deer as well. But as a trap gun, you will need to be a very good shot gun shooter - the .410 has a smaller shot pattern.

A .410 or probably a 20 gauge would be cheaper fun but I'd rather have a little extra overkill so I don't get eaten or some such thing!
I have almost zero interest in shot loads, so I'd probably use mini-slugs or some such thing for most of my shooting around to prolong my shoulder and wallet. I've read some good reviews on Aguila min-slugs and they seem to be a better $ for shooting around, but they don't work too well in pumps (would work fine in a SxS).
That's good to know!schlepporello wrote:Do not under any circumstances shoot any shotgun equipped with screw-in chokes without the chokes installed.
The easy answer is to get your Rossi heavily modified and sell it cheaply to me.As for other S & S shotguns with a single trigger and under $500? I'm at a loss. I have my Rossi Overland and my Winchester 1300 Defender, I'm plenty happy with them.
Now in the single vs double trigger debate, my O & U has a single while my S & S has doubles.
