The trouble is that all double guns built at a low price range will come with some "caveats" - therefore, let's just say that your purchase risk will be comparatively much much lower if you chose not to acquire the models you had visualized initially.![]()
Very good advice. O/U's are truly an item where you get what you pay for. In addition to the people who report problems with cheap guns look around the gun clubs and see how many of them are for sale with low round counts. There's a reason for that.
If it were me, and I was on a budget, I would be looking at a used gun, not new. You will get far more for your dollar and be happier in the long run. Look for a gently used Browning or Beretta and you will find a gun that will give you a lifetime of service. There are other makes that will serve just as well, but those will be the most common ones you will encounter.
I think ill wait for awhile before I buy an O/U, but for now I want a decent shotgun for trap shooting, I was thinking about benelli nova 12ga 28in, is this shotgun a good choice for trap, how about the quality? Sorry guys for all the questions but I'm kinda new to the sport.
X2
It takes quality parts to make a quality O/U. Anything much less than 2k gets you garbage. Cheap O/U are famous for FTF.



























