Old wingmaster barrel mod?

langbanger

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Hello. If I were to buy an older 870 wingmaster with a fixed full choke 30" barrel, could I have a gunsmith cut it down to say 28" and thread it for multiple choke selections? If that's possible, what would something like that cost?
 
Ok thanks. Would I have to cut it down or could l keep it 30" and still have it threaded for aftermarket chokes? I would like to find a 2 3/4 30" barrel to use as a sporting clays gun.
 
So if I buy a new barrel that shoots 2 3/4 or 3" will I lose velocity shooting 2 3/4" shells? Thanks guys for the quick replies. I'm only just learning the world of shotguns.
 
I asked my Smith the same question, said it would be cheaper to buy a new barrel, then you could keep the original one for the wingmaster.
Somebody chime in on this but to date your wingmaster, you can't by the receiver's serial number, only the barrel's number if it's original?
 
So if I buy a new barrel that shoots 2 3/4 or 3" will I lose velocity shooting 2 3/4" shells? Thanks guys for the quick replies. I'm only just learning the world of shotguns.

No. The chamber length has no bearing on shot speed.

You need about 18" of barrel for the powder to burn virtually completely. The length of barrel you have over the 18 inches is for balance and handling, not for acceleration.
 
I asked my Smith the same question, said it would be cheaper to buy a new barrel, then you could keep the original one for the wingmaster.
Somebody chime in on this but to date your wingmaster, you can't by the receiver's serial number, only the barrel's number if it's original?

You are correct, there is a 2 digit code on the left side of a remington barrel that tells its age. To cut, crown, then drill and tap for a bead should run about $100 (Vented rib may cost more). To ream, and tap for tubes plus the price of one tube should be about $125. So you're looking at roughly $225 vs $270 for a new, vented rib, 3" chamber wingmaster barrel from cabelas, which comes with 3 tubes.
 
You are correct, there is a 2 digit code on the left side of a remington barrel that tells its age. To cut, crown, then drill and tap for a bead should run about $100 (Vented rib may cost more). To ream, and tap for tubes plus the price of one tube should be about $125. So you're looking at roughly $225 vs $270 for a new, vented rib, 3" chamber wingmaster barrel from cabelas, which comes with 3 tubes.

Ok so could I just have the barrel reamed and tapped for 125 dollars and eliminate the cutting altogether?
 
That's what I would do. Providing you like the way it handles as is, and the gunsmith's prices are decent. But always remember, good work ain't cheap and cheap work ain't good. Another thing to to be mindful of is what thread the gunsmith has taps for. I'm pretty sure the most common are Hastings, colonial, and briley. You will need to consider this for acquiring more tubes.
 
But do they actually have a new wingmaster barrel in stock? Most places I had contacted in the last year didn't and weren't sure when they would have more that's why I bought an entire second used wingmaster with an interchangeable choked barrel. I would get an 870 wingmaster barrel fitted for chokes simply because I'd rather that then stick an express barrel on it.
My nearest gunsmith will thread a barrel for chokes and include one choke for approximately $130 for lead chokes or $150 for an extended steel choke. This is still cheaper then the $270+ shipping price for new wingmaster remchoked barrels.
 
I think tapping the barrel would be the best bet for me. Now does anyone know where a guy can find an 870 wingmaster 12 gauge with 28 or 30" barrel? They are either a crazy price or go real fast on the ee.
 
I'm pretty sure that any Remington 870 barrel, including express barrels, should fit your action. Just buy a new barrel and be done with it. This will give you standard Remington threads and you will have a greater selection of chokes which will likely be less expensive than custom thin wall chokes.
 
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