do tactical shotguns work for hunting

Some features of the tactical shotgun can aid the hunter while others simply add weight to the gun and offer no benefit to the hunter in the field. For the most part though, the tactical shotgun is best used when the hunter needs a short range powerful rifle.

Ghost ring sights are the best choice of iron sights for shooting slugs. While they are not quite as handy when firing shot, they do not present a huge problem for the rabbit hunter or grouse hunter, but are detrimental for shooting at birds in flight. A reflex sight is useful to the same hunter who benefits from the ghost ring, and the reflex sight is better in low light conditions, or against a target that does not contrast against the front sight.

Equipment rails look cool, and having a laser might benefit the very close cover big game hunter, but an Australian would have more use for mounting a flashlight on a hunting shotgun. For the most part, shooting in the dark is frowned upon.

A magazine that holds more than 5 rounds simply makes the gun heavier. I can't think of a single problem in the field that could be better handled with a 9 shot repeating shotgun than a 5 shot. I have come to this conclusion after carrying a 590 for many miles.

The sling on a shot gun offers the same benefits as a sling on a rifle, and if slug shooting, slinging up the shotgun makes hitting easier. I'll take the opportunity to once again put in a plug for the Safari Ching Sling from Galco. This sling can be used very effectively as a carry strap, but you can sling up much faster with it than any other system I have seen.

The individual hunter can decide if a sidesaddle is a benefit to him. For the big game hunter armed with a shotgun, a few rounds of birdshot for upland game in a sidesaddle might be handy. Conversely the upland hunter who wants a few slugs in case of bear trouble might also like one.

If hunting in difficult country, a heat shield offers some protection to the barrel if the hunter takes a bad fall.

Short barrels do not have a huge detrimental effect on a shotgun performance. I would be hesitant to choose a gun with a barrel so short that I might grab the muzzle with my support hand. If a 5 shot magazine is optimal, a 2 shot magazine is lacking, and when barrel length is reduced to less than a foot, thats about all you have. Thread in chokes would make the tacti-gun a little more versatile.

Pistol grip stocks are a love em or hate affair. For the most part I don't like them on shotguns, but they are fine on an AR or an FN. Its whatever you find appealing.

The plain pistol grip with no shoulder stock is the worst idea to appear in a long time. People keep buying them though, and before they could buy them, they would saw the butt off the gun. Even a shotgun with a very short barrel can be shot more accurately and controlled more easily with a butt stock than without one. Hitting a big game animal with a shotgun slug requires the same marksmanship ability as shooting it with a rifle. This is simply not possible without a butt stock on the shotgun. If you think it is the same as shooting a handgun, it is not. The recoil is fiercer, and the gun is unbalanced, resulting in poor performance on the target and more time required to get off subsequent shots. On close range targets you want the gun to be quick to bring on the target, and you want to be able to deliver a second shot as soon as you have recovered from the recoil of the first shot. The butt provides the shooter with 3 points of contact with the gun. It provides an index to align his eye with the sights, and it allows the recoil to be obsorbed by his body rather than his hands and arms.
 
Last edited:
im wondering this because i like the look of the tactical shotgun but would use it primarily for clay and hunting. id also like it to autoload. or does any one have a good suggestion.

Rails, folding stocks, vertical foregrips, weapon lights, bayonet mounts, laser sights, optical sights, ghost ring sights, jumbo safeties, bungie slings, digital camo paint jobs and the like all have exactly the same effect on choke and muzzle velocity, i.e. none whatsoever. The added weight will soak up a bit of recoil and make the gun a little less handy is all.

I've got a slightly pimped 870MM that I take bunny hunting sometimes. Kills them dead quite nicely.
 
The only real problem that I see is some of those tactical shotguns have too short of a barrel for hunting. I've hunted rabbits and grouse extensively with shotguns and I can honestly say that even an 18.5" bbl is on the short side for hunting and you will have to pass up game past 25 yards, or have wounded bunnies/rabbits get away. If you've got a spare barrel that's 22"-24" for your shotgun, then swap it out and hunt with it no problems, however.
 
Clay guns are cool,he was a new to hunting post and the new hunters tend to think the tactcool are the way to go.I do not have a tactcool,just hunting guns.
 
tactical shotguns work for hunting as well as hunting shotguns work for tactical purposes.

Covey Ridge nailed it ... the right tool for the right job !

Reminds me as well, of something one of my buddies would tell the Jr. Hockey players he used to coach ....

" You can't make chicken salad out of chicken s**t ! " :D

You CAN use a hammer as a screwdriver, but a screwdriver
WORKS BETTER .
 
Last edited:
I chose to tacticalize my 3-1/2" 870 super mag turkey 23" barrel.
If you want some of the best features of both worlds go with an 3" 870 magnum turkey. 21" barrel w/ rem choke. Then add the tactical features you want.
dscn1964.jpg
 
Does a bear crap in the woods? I stopped using my 1100 for a shorter barrel for grouse, because where i hunt the bush is tight. My longer barrelled shoties would disintegrate grouse. The shorter barrel was more practical for its bigger pattern.
 
Barrel length has nothing to do with pattern.

Get a 18.5" tactical gun with a bbl threaded for chokes and you're in business.
 
The only real problem that I see is some of those tactical shotguns have too short of a barrel for hunting. I've hunted rabbits and grouse extensively with shotguns and I can honestly say that even an 18.5" bbl is on the short side for hunting and you will have to pass up game past 25 yards, or have wounded bunnies/rabbits get away. If you've got a spare barrel that's 22"-24" for your shotgun, then swap it out and hunt with it no problems, however.


what makes the shorter barrel worse than a longer one? MV is very similar and the pattern size is not associated with barrel length....

I've taken grouse, rabbit, duck and goose with my 12" 870. Wing shooting is definately do-able, although a longer barrel really helps with a nice smooth swing. For the once or twice i go out and blast waterfowl the 12" barrel with ghost rings works fine.

I think a short, compact shotgun with screw-in chokes is the most ideal hunting shotgun around. I would only go with a 22"+ barrel if i was getting a shotgun strictly for wingshooting or claybusting.
 
Tactical Harvest of Wildlife

My Benelli M4 works for me for everything so far!

Grouse, deer . . . a couple of 'doves' too, but they turned out to be the Western Red Breasted Dove, aka 'robin' . . . but when they flushed, we didn't know . . . I don't want to talk about that anymore . . .

I keep hearing about Wild Boar, my next project for Tactical Harvest, but I am starting to suspect they are and urban myth, at least in this part of the Prairies. Apparently my buddy's cousin's brother-in-law knows exactly where they are, though.

:shotgun:
 
I bought an 870, and an extra 14" barrel from Dlask, as well as a fixed pistol gripped stock. The stock and barrel are easily interchanged, so you can go tactical - or duck hunting with minimal work.
 
Back
Top Bottom