28 ga with a sharp Kick??? That I have yet to see. In 100,000's of rounds of 28 ga fired and at least 20 different makes of guns shot and currently own 4 makes of the single shots have never witnessed it..My two girls at 12 started with 28ga and 20ga 1100's and not once did I hear them say a word about recoil. I started with a 16 and never noticed Just my experience or someone made up some real hot reloads
Recoil energy 410 7-11 ft. lbs : 28 ga 11- 13 ft.lbs : 16ga 22-24 ft.lbs
All right I will say it. Despite the good intentions of many parents those that shoot them in events know all too well they are an experts gun.
I love the .410 alot and shoot an average of 2000 rounds a year most years but it really is short-changing a beginner.
It doesn't give you anything to get used to for a real shotgun, small tight pattern and can create a lot of frustration.
Youth don't have a very long attention span and they are at a real disadvantage when you start them with one.
Experts seem to agree. From a shotgunning mag when the question was asked
A lot of us here probably started with .410s. The first gun I shot was a single-shot Beretta that my dad had cut down to fit me when I was quite young. I mostly remember shooting stationary paper plates and balloons blowing along the ground with it. For puncturing plates and popping ballons, a .410 is plenty of gun and they have practically no recoil. For anything else, it can be challenging. There’s just not much shot in a .410 cartridge making the pattern core small and the fringes weak. I waited until both my kids were big enough to shoot 20 gauge youth model 1100s (age 11-12) to start them out because I wanted them to think shooting was fun, not frustrating.
.410s are better suited to experts with the skill to shoot the little guns and the maturity to know when not to shoot them.
and chuckie's 2 cents
http://w w w.chuckhawks.com/first_shotguns.htm