- Location
- West Central Alberta
I prefer a 28 inch for general hunting and a 18.5 for a camp slug gun.
I agree on the QC drop. all my recent 870s have actually been clones, better optiosn for wildlife defense, better price pointmossberg barrels are easy to swap too it's just that i'm hearing that additional barrels are hard to come by. remington's QC apparently took a nose dive a while back so mossberg shotguns are the gold standard of pump shotguns now.
I'm not really seeing any options for multi barrel combos for the 500 or 590 on the gun store websites i look through though.
You won’t find a combo for the 590, only the 500 or the Maverick 88 have the combo sets from Mossberg. I had a quick look and seems like the 500 combo’s are sold out most places currently. There are 3 or 4 for sale on GP if you are interested in used, a couple of them look to be on very good shapemossberg barrels are easy to swap too it's just that i'm hearing that additional barrels are hard to come by. remington's QC apparently took a nose dive a while back so mossberg shotguns are the gold standard of pump shotguns now.
I'm not really seeing any options for multi barrel combos for the 500 or 590 on the gun store websites i look through though.
^^ This ^^ .... It's best to define how the gun will be used the most and go from there. Look for an extra bbl down the road.There is really no one size fits all in any style of gun.
Agree .... I used a 26" 870 for years for waterfowl and upland. It worked well for both.I could do everything I would want to do, with a 26 inch barrel with an improved cylinder choke. Lead on upland birds and steel on ducks and geese.
this is the answer..full stop.+1
Yes, it has to have removable chokes!!!
And I went from a 30inch to a 28inch and that worked well for me.Agree .... I used a 26" 870 for years for waterfowl and upland. It worked well for both.




























