I'm curious about the warning, too. I just watched a video where a guy bought a brand new 88, shot 505 rounds through it (buckshot, magnum, etc.) and it worked PERFECTLY at the end. No misfires, hang fires, shells not ejecting right...nothing. The one I was going to get, the Charles Daly 301, I watched someone buy it new, load one shell, shoot it...immediately it got stuck. He did the same thing 4 more times and stopped using it lolWhy stay away from the Mossberg/maverick?
Both 870s and 500s (including 88s) are great, reliable, easy to maintain shotguns. The 500s/88s typically come in a little cheaper with their alu receiver. I prefer the safety placement on the 500s to the 870/88s.
I had an 88 combo with 28” and 18.5” barrels, great and solid, never skipped a beat. I sold it and bought an immaculate 500 with walnut furniture and a handful of chokes for the same price. I’m a sucker for walnut.
Shop around - good shotguns last for years and you can often find great deals on used ones.
Have a think what features are best for your usage - barrel length, choke interchangeability, safety position, parts/aftermarket availability.
Between me and 3 friends we own 4 Maverick 88s and a 500. They have collectively seen thousands of rounds and while I haven't been present for every single one of those trigger pulls, the only issue I know of is one time one of the guns had light strikes on a cheap slug.I'm curious about the warning, too. I just watched a video where a guy bought a brand new 88, shot 505 rounds through it (buckshot, magnum, etc.) and it worked PERFECTLY at the end. No misfires, hang fires, shells not ejecting right...nothing. The one I was going to get, the Charles Daly 301, I watched someone buy it new, load one shell, shoot it...immediately it got stuck. He did the same thing 4 more times and stopped using it lol
The exact kit you're talking about, with the smaller and larger barrel, is exactly what I'm thinking of getting. The 500 with the walnut stock and forend is my future upgrade goal. Absolute beauty!
The 500s have used the one-piece foreend design that the Maverick has for years at this point. You'll have to buy an action tube to change the forend on either model these days.Maverick 88 for cheap. Mossberg 500 for customization. Mossberg 590A1 for your forever pump gun. Older Remington 870s ARE good, but save yourself the hunt and keep it simple. There’s a reason Mossbergs have the reputation that they do.
It's JD Vance.I always wondered who your profile pic is and why it became a huge meme
What! That’s really fckin lame. Just go with a 590 or an 88 then i guess.Between me and 3 friends we own 4 Maverick 88s and a 500. They have collectively seen thousands of rounds and while I haven't been present for every single one of those trigger pulls, the only issue I know of is one time one of the guns had light strikes on a cheap slug.
They're not fancy, but they work.
The 500s have used the one-piece foreend design that the Maverick has for years at this point. You'll have to buy an action tube to change the forend on either model these days.
The 500 still has some things going for it - I shoot left hand so the tang safety is a big deal for me, plus they come drilled and tapped whereas the 88s don't, so if slug hunting with a scope or even turkey with a red dot is something you wanna do the 500 is the better option there too.What! That’s really fckin lame. Just go with a 590 or an 88 then i guess.
The 500 still has some things going for it - I shoot left hand so the tang safety is a big deal for me, plus they come drilled and tapped whereas the 88s don't, so if slug hunting with a scope or even turkey with a red dot is something you wanna do the 500 is the better option there too.
Plenty of older 500s around with two piece foreends and better quality wood furniture than the current model 500s.
And in many cases you can pick one up onsale with 2 or 3 barrells.Winchester SXP
Yes they're Turkish, but they're pretty reliable.



























