Hunting with a Weatherby 28 Gauge SXS

I did have a 28 ga sxs for a short time, but as a lefty it didn't fit me.
Love hunting and shooting the Remington 1100 Sporting 28 and Benelli Ethos 28, as well as my WInchester Model 37A in 28. Gave my daughter the Cooey Model 84 in 28.
It is a great grouse gauge!
 
I have used a 28gauge to harvest hundreds of pheasant ,sharptail grouse, and Hungarian partridge. For a couple of years I used a Citori 525, then a 625 Feather, then an AYA#2, and for the past several years, a Grulla Consort. An English stocked , two trigger, SxS shotgun, is by far my most favorite upland shotgun, and the 28 gauge is light and very effective over a pointing dog.
 
My first gun was a 28 gauge single shot Winchester/Cooey Model 84.For quite sometime, it was my only upland gun.The old girl still works well and every so often I take it out for a hunt.Still bags game as well as it did ,when both gun and man were much younger.:)
 
Just sold my 28g Weatherby still have a couple 28's left but that was a great gun and harvested many grouse and pheasant with it. My only issue was the 26" barrel otherwise would still be in the safe. The Beretta 28 upland I have now has a 28" barrel and is capable of shooting 3" which will probably never happen. But as far as comparison the Weatherby was every bit as capable as the Beretta for a third of the price IMHO.
 
This is a little off topic but any one hunt/own a semi auto 28? I am getting back in to running rabbits with dogs and I think a semi auto 28 gauge would be an ideal gun.
 
This is a little off topic but any one hunt/own a semi auto 28? I am getting back in to running rabbits with dogs and I think a semi auto 28 gauge would be an ideal gun.
I bought a Remington 1100 in 28g last year from a fellow skeet shooter…it took lots of arm twisting and a generous cash offer but it was worth it !! I love it for shooting barnyard pigeons and crows. If there is snow on the ground and finding your empties is a problem I’ll bring out my Browning Ultra XS 28g instead. Have a few Browning/Winchester Model 12’s in 28g that are a total joy to hunt with and shoot sporting clays with. Bismuth shot for mallards over decoys. Last but not least just received my Krieghoff 28g with 30” parcour barrels with fixed chokes. The starlings and pigeons will be in trouble soon. On cottontails I use 3/4 oz #6 reloads. If I could only hunt with one shotgun it would be a 28g, and everything else between 10g to 410 would stay at home. And from reading this post my impressions are that other shooters are in LOVE with this magical little 28g also !!!!
 
The Weatherby Orion has been around for a long time and build quality has been up and down depending on who made them. The first Orions were made by SKB and while not being very fancy were pretty good quality guns. Production then moved to Fausti where the looks and finish improved but the quality was a bit hit and miss. After Fausti, production then got moved to ATA, a Turkish company known for replicating popular shotgun models with varying degrees of workmanship. The present Orion is now made by another Turkish company called Yildiz which in the past has been noted for their exquisite wood and not so exquisite workmanship. I’ve read that Yildiz quality has improved greatly in the last few years but frankly based on my past experience with them I’ll pass on giving them any of my money.

My take on the new Orion? I can’t stand a Matt finish on a gun that is being billed and touted as high quality. Everyone knows that it’s way cheaper and easier to do that than polish and blue the metal but it just screams cheap to me. The large Weatherby logo on the receiver also screams gaudy to me as does the extended and color banded choke tubes. I love extended and coloured tubes on a sporting clays gun but they just don’t seem right on an upland game side by side. Maybe I’m just too much of a traditionalist.
The wood I’ve seen on these is very nice and that’s where Yildiz does seem to excel, I’ve seen plenty of their guns in the past with stunning wood on them, unfortunately lipstick on a pig doesn’t change the fact that it’s a pig.

My pearls….. go ahead, flame away!
 
Well ,I have a new Orion ,in 20g though must have been built during the week as its fit and finish is quite satisfactory and I have had several Turkish guns. The logo on the side yes could be better but my Beretta 400 in 28 upland screams with its side logos so maybe I just roll with the punches on new guns .I am in the other corner on finishes and prefer satin to the "wet" look but hey that's why they sell different strokes for different folks. The Orions Prince of Wales grip is really nice for us with big mitts.
 
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I don't hunt upland game all the time, but when I do, I use a 28 gauge O/U Savage Milano. I have shot countless pheasants, grouse, woodcock, squirrel and rabbit, mostly with nickle plated #6, 3/4 ounce load in a winny AA hull. Generally shoot IC and Mod in my barrels, this was done years ago when my pointers were still around, since they are gone I haven't done much upland.
 
I had a Yildiz Elegant A1 many years ago when the Yildiz guns first arrived here. The wood was spectacular, the blued barrels were well polished and the engraving well done but unfortunately that’s where the quality ended. Pulling the stock off revealed soft coil springs, machining burrs, rough and sharp edges everywhere and triggers that broke at 11 lbs. Other over and under guns at that time we’re not any better and I saw some that were so loose after 4 or 500 rounds that you would think they had 100 k through them.

Ascetics are what they are, the Orion doesn’t appeal to me but that’s just my preference.

As I previously mentioned, the new Yildiz guns are reportedly much better quality than the previous ones so hopefully that has carried through to the Weatherby Orion they are making….I’m just not a believer yet.
 
I just got my hunting license to do small game hunting and have been looking into things. Honestly, don't sleep on the Stoeger Uplander 28, maybe it's a little rough around the edges but in my tracked round count I'm at 825 (clays) and it isn't exhibiting any issues. If you're just using it for hunting, that should be sufficient! I use it more than my Citori 28.

As I previously mentioned, the new Yildiz guns are reportedly much better quality than the previous ones so hopefully that has carried through to the Weatherby Orion they are making….I’m just not a believer yet.

I did round tracking thread at another forum and my Yildiz Elegant made it to 750 rounds before it stopped closing on its own, I have to hold the action lever to get it to close. Thus far I have not been able to fix it so it will have to go to a smith. It is a pretty gun but I don't think I'd buy another.
 
750 rounds isn't very much.

I had one of the first Elegant A1's to come into our area. Think I paid under a grand for it at the time and the wood was to die for, the sort of wood you would find on guns costing a lot more money! The hand engraving was pretty good and the bluing very acceptable but unfortunately that's where the good news ended.
The trigger broke at 12 pounds for both barrels. I contacted the dealer and he said he would give it to his gunsmith and a couple of days later I got it back and the trigger broke on one barrel at 10 lbs while the other broke at 8 lbs. The dealer didn't hide his displeasure with my complaints so I took the matter into my own hands and pulled the gun apart. To start with there was a bur in the trigger cutout in the tang that was hanging up the trigger a bit and a fine stone fixed that. Next I took the trigger springs out and found that if I compressed them between my thumb and forefinger they shortened by almost a quarter inch, so much for having good springs.... After compressing the springs I put the gun back together and lo and behold the trigger broke on both barrels at 5 lbs. That fixed the trigger problem so I then shot the gun a bit and it handled well enough but I was never happy with what I found inside of that gun so when I got a good offer to sell it by someone who was dazzled by the wood It wasn't a hard decision to let it go.
No matter how pretty the gun is I have to get rid of it if it has flaws... I won't keep a gun that has manufacturer problems or I can't shoot well.
 
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