Remington 870 Wingmaster help

PantherD1943

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Hey guys someone is offering to trade me for another firearm a Remington 870 Wingmaster with 28 inch barrel and full fixed choke. I heard that some older shotguns cannot take steel shot through them as this is the case with the Winchester M12 I inherited which was made in 1941/42. I've also heard that you cannot swap barrels on an older 870 with new barrels. Are any of these true? Also whats the value of a Wingmaster? I need a shotgun for bird hunting and turkey as I only have the M12 and a Franchi PA8 so I want to take this deal but just need to figure these things out before I go ahead with it.

Thanks
 
The joy of the 870 is the basic platform has not changed since day one. I am shooting a 1953 Wing master, with a new Express barrel. I have also had the ejector changed to handle 3 in shells. As far as the steel/barrel, it will be fine, barring the choke, and how big of shot you wanna use.
 
Its a cylinder bore, it has pitting on the inside at the muzzle which I read is damage from steel shooting.

I thought in your first post you said it's fixed full choke? If cylinder bore then it's already been opened up or it was maybe a 30" barrel and has been cut off.. I don't know about the pitting being caused by steel shot. More likely lack of oiling. I'm not sure if older wingmasters are chrome lined. If so, then the chrome finish would have been removed if the choke was reamed out, therefore no longer having the chrome protection in that area. If not oiled, it may rust in that area compared to the rest of the bore.
 
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SHOTGUN BARREL ALTERATIONS FOR STEEL SHOT

Forcing Cone Alteration:

Factory shotgun barrels usually have a fairly short and abrupt forcing cone. The forcing cone is the tapered area just ahead of the chamber where the shell is contained. Altering the forcing cone, so it is one and one half or two inches in length, reduces recoil and improves the pattern density. Trap shooters and skeet shooters have been doing this for many years. It is a good benefit to the steel shot user as well.

Choke Alteration:
Choke designation from the tightest to the most open are:
Extra Full, Full, Improved Modified, Modified, Skeet II, Improved Cylinder, Skeet I, and Cylinder Bore.

Steel shot does not require the constriction that lead shot needs, to produce good patterns. In fact too much constriction, causes poor, erratic patterns, and in some cases, permanently damages the barrel. I have seen barrels bulged at the choke, I have seen barrels where the choke split right open, from using steel shot.

For steel shot, with thin barrels, chokes should be altered to at least Skeet II. Often, over & under, and side-by-side shotguns, are best altered to Skeet I and Skeet II chokes. Heavier barrels can be left at Modified choke but may see an improvement in the pattern if opened slightly.
 
I thought in your first post you said it's fixed full choke? If cylinder bore then it's already been opened up or it was maybe a 30" barrel and has been cut off.. I don't know about the pitting being caused by steel shot. More likely lack of oiling. I'm not sure if older wingmasters are chrome lined. If so, then the chrome finish would have been removed if the choke was reamed out, therefore no longer having the chrome protection in that area. If not oiled, it may rust in that area compared to the rest of the bore.

I meant the Model 12 not the Wingmaster sorry.
 
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