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The M2 is an excellent shotgun if one is looking to hunt Waterfowl as well as Upland and just wants a semi to accomplish both.
The inertia driven design has a comparably sleeker profile and lends to ease of strip down/maintenance.
I had two of those (wood and synthetic) and foolishly ended up trading both couple years back as I hardly hunt Waterfowl....and use breechloading shotguns for Upland. That was a wrong decision on my part and I've regretted that since ....should've kept one.
I'm not huge into waterfowl, but its not out of the question, Its something I'm thinking of for the future. I shoot quite a bit of trap/exhibition, I had initially considered getting a Rem. 1100 but was soon made aware of their faults by a local gun shop.
I've had one for the past 3 years. Great gun. Will keep shooting any load no matter how dirty it gets and when it is time to clean is a piece of cake. Easy as an 870. It's nice and light to carry all day. With the shims you should be able to make it fit whatever shape you want. Only caveat is that any accessories or parts (which you probably won't ever need) you may get later will be pricey.
I concur. I bought an M2 Tactical from P & D a year ago and I've never looked back. The pistol grip is comfortable, the felt recoil is minimal and the simple inertia action allows to use of everything from Krappy Tire low-brass 2 3/4" #8 shot to 3" magnum slugs. No hiccups, jams or failures in the thousands of rounds I've put thru it. After I bought it I bought 250 rounds of #8 target shot, 100 3" slugs and assorted other BB shot, buckshot and other shot. 500 rounds in total. Over the course of the next 2 days my friend and I went out to the range and gave it the torture test. We "broke" it in with the heavy load stuff first, then we put the low brass stuff through it. The Benelli functioned flawlessly. Not a single FTE or problem with the action cycling. And this has been the case since.
The Benelli comes with 3 chokes and a choke wrench. It's actually remarkably effective for shooting clays. I shot with the trap club last summer and with a full choke it kept up with all the old timers and their 10,000 dollar over and unders. They laughed at the beginning of the season. They weren't laughing after the first day.
Anyway, if you have the money to spend on a shotgun, go for the M2. I highly recommend it.
bought my benelli m2 left hand about 7 months ago been a great gun does trap skeet and sporting clays just great for me had some trouble with deer this year but only because of single factory bead