Where are all the Nova's???

Bobbyv8

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enough already with the 870/grizzly talk, where are the Benelli Nova posts? im surprised how little this shotgun gets talked about. In my opinion side by side against any 870 the nova has its number in every possible way (870P excluded, its a different animal all together)

I have a Nova with 18.5 inch barrel, and once had a 870 tac for about a week before i realized it could never compare to the Nova. As for price the 870 should be worth about half the price of the nova.

Anyone else share my thoughts??
 
You don't know how crappy the 870 is until you shoot the nova. I stopped using my 870 after I got my nova (bought it with ralph-bucks). Even if it's twice the price it's totally worth it. Plus I hear the newer 870 QC is worse. I'm not knocking the 870, it's history speaks for itself, but the italians decided to take pumps to the next level leaving remington behind. What I love about benelli shotguns is after you use them you don't need to mod it. I think that's why you never seen them for sale used!
 
You don't know how crappy the 870 is until you shoot the nova. I stopped using my 870 after I got my nova (bought it with ralph-bucks). Even if it's twice the price it's totally worth it. Plus I hear the newer 870 QC is worse. I'm not knocking the 870, it's history speaks for itself, but the italians decided to take pumps to the next level leaving remington behind. What I love about benelli shotguns is after you use them you don't need to mod it. I think that's why you never seen them for sale used!

I had my Nova and my 870 Police with factory 14" barrel on the EE, and whatever one sold first the other was staying..but I might have priced the Nova a little on the high side;)
 
You don't know how crappy the 870 is until you shoot the nova.

:rolleyes:

ive owned 870, Nova, 1300, and 500/510/590 pumps (no Ithacas :( ). the only pumps i own now are 870s and 870 clones - all the rest have been traded or sold.

the Nova is a decent gun. if you handle a Nova and it fits you, and you only intend to use it for the exact purpose you bought it for, great. otherwise it has some major drawbacks. it has an extremely small aftermarket, very expensive barrels, rattly forends, and will not fit all shooters. the Nova/Supernova have either zero or very limited stock fit options. if you decide later that you want a different type of stock or different type of barrel you may as well just buy another gun.

with the world's largest shotgun aftermarket of new/used/take-off parts and accessories for every purpose and budget, any 870 receiver can be transformed into a gun for any purpose or to fit any shooter. your 18" barreled 'home defense' 870 can be transformed into an effective deer, duck, turkey, upland, youth, etc gun with a few (usually very affordable) parts from the EE. just about any type of barrel can be found in the EE between $100-200, whereas a Benelli barrel will cost you nearly as much as a new gun.

the 'oldskool' steel receivers (as opposed to new-fangled skeletonized polymer-coated ones) can be reblued, parkerized, duracoated, etc at any time to look like new (or better than new). sights and rails can be drilled/tapped or silver soldered securely onto them. a Wingmaster or 870P receiver will always be a highly sought after commodity.

i have a few redundant 870s in my gun cabinet. regardless, i have no intention of ever selling them because i know that if i do need a platform for any type of shotgun build i can grab one, spend a few bucks on the EE, and have a bombproof, familiar gun tailored to that specific purpose and shooter. good luck doing that with a Nova, much less a Nova Tactical.
 
There are way more parts for the 870 for sure, but why would you want to dump money into a cheap gun? You can add all you want to it but it's still a Remington shotgun! You are better off putting the money towards a nice new Italian made gun. At least that's how I justify adding to the collection...:)
 
:rolleyes:

ive owned 870, Nova, 1300, and 500/510/590 pumps (no Ithacas :( ). the only pumps i own now are 870s and 870 clones - all the rest have been traded or sold.

the Nova is a decent gun. if you handle a Nova and it fits you, and you only intend to use it for the exact purpose you bought it for, great. otherwise it has some major drawbacks. it has an extremely small aftermarket, very expensive barrels, rattly forends, and will not fit all shooters. the Nova/Supernova have either zero or very limited stock fit options. if you decide later that you want a different type of stock or different type of barrel you may as well just buy another gun.

with the world's largest shotgun aftermarket of new/used/take-off parts and accessories for every purpose and budget, any 870 receiver can be transformed into a gun for any purpose or to fit any shooter. your 18" barreled 'home defense' 870 can be transformed into an effective deer, duck, turkey, upland, youth, etc gun with a few (usually very affordable) parts from the EE. just about any type of barrel can be found in the EE between $100-200, whereas a Benelli barrel will cost you nearly as much as a new gun.

the 'oldskool' steel receivers (as opposed to new-fangled skeletonized polymer-coated ones) can be reblued, parkerized, duracoated, etc at any time to look like new (or better than new). sights and rails can be drilled/tapped or silver soldered securely onto them. a Wingmaster or 870P receiver will always be a highly sought after commodity.

i have a few redundant 870s in my gun cabinet. regardless, i have no intention of ever selling them because i know that if i do need a platform for any type of shotgun build i can grab one, spend a few bucks on the EE, and have a bombproof, familiar gun tailored to that specific purpose and shooter. good luck doing that with a Nova, much less a Nova Tactical.

The forend rattle is easily adjusted out on the nova/sn with 2 allen bolts.

-Dave
 
There are way more parts for the 870 for sure, but why would you want to dump money into a cheap gun? You can add all you want to it but it's still a Remington shotgun! You are better off putting the money towards a nice new Italian made gun. At least that's how I justify adding to the collection...:)

whatever floats your boat :)
but the Nova is about as much a 'Nice Italian Made Gun' as a Fiat Punto is a 'Nice Italian Made Car' :D
 
I didn't like the chubby, plasticy feel of the Novas I've handled, they cycle pretty smoothly and are otherwise competent pieces of gear but if I wanted a Benelli, I'd be an autoloader.
 
whatever floats your boat :)
but the Nova is about as much a 'Nice Italian Made Gun' as a Fiat Punto is a 'Nice Italian Made Car' :D


might not be the best quality, but its also similarly priced to the 870 tac which hardly has any quality at all. 870's would be nice if they were priced accordingly at about $200
 
My Ithacas are "cheap" too. But if I feel so unworthy of being amongst other shotgunners, I'll grab my SKB/Ithaca O/U that is a great handling upland gun & I've still spent less than half the cash for anything equal to it from Europe. Rabbits and grouse still die from my "cheap" O/U shotgun strangely enough. I also trust my life with an M37 Ithaca Deerslayer & so did the archer when we ground stalked wild boar. It's proven itself and was not found wanting. My shotguns are working guns, and not for hanging on the wall for bling-bling. The last thing I want to do is sweat over a few scratches to the stock, from pushing birds out of a briar patch, or splashed mud on the steel from a pig wallow.

I think by definition, I myself have more in common with most Remington 870 owners.
 
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well Ive handled some of the nova shotguns and even wanted the new super nova tac in 14 inch until I found I could not have it threaded for choke tubes,the nova is an excellent firearm, but I do have to stick up for the 870 no matter which model, they have a very long and proven track record and myself have yet to experience any problems with proper care,I will always have an 870 at my disposal
 
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