mcdaniel said:I prefer the Moss 500 to the 870 for the safety design. I wouldn't personally buy one with a pistol grip though, its a bit of a stretch to release it and I prefer the standard stocked versions. Buy a regular old used Moss, shoot some clays with it and get used to it. You can always put a short barrel on it if that strikes your fancy.
You are going to get the 500 or 870 recommendations over and over on this question, at that point its preference.
My first gun was a Moss 500 and that is the reason I like the safety design, lots of use makes it second nature. In other words, whatever you buy, practice.
tigerfan00 said:mcdaniel said:I prefer the Moss 500 to the 870 for the safety design. I wouldn't personally buy one with a pistol grip though, its a bit of a stretch to release it and I prefer the standard stocked versions. Buy a regular old used Moss, shoot some clays with it and get used to it. You can always put a short barrel on it if that strikes your fancy.
You are going to get the 500 or 870 recommendations over and over on this question, at that point its preference.
My first gun was a Moss 500 and that is the reason I like the safety design, lots of use makes it second nature. In other words, whatever you buy, practice.
I agree wholeheartedly
The 870's are nice for what they are, but i can quickly and easily operate the safety on a mossberg without a 2nd thought and without releasing my grip on the gun hardly at all
mcdaniel said:I prefer the Moss 500 to the 870 for the safety design. I wouldn't personally buy one with a pistol grip though, its a bit of a stretch to release it and I prefer the standard stocked versions. Buy a regular old used Moss, shoot some clays with it and get used to it. You can always put a short barrel on it if that strikes your fancy.
You are going to get the 500 or 870 recommendations over and over on this question, at that point its preference.
My first gun was a Moss 500 and that is the reason I like the safety design, lots of use makes it second nature. In other words, whatever you buy, practice.
John Canuck said:One thing to consider Elaine. A shotgun is a two handed weapon. When one considers a home defense scenario, they should consider the possibility that one hand might be busy with securing their children, or using a phone, or holding a flashlight, etc. Just something to think about.
I consider the Remington 870 as the standard when choosing a pump.