Mostmaverman
Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2015
- Messages
- 8
Which auto is best for sporting was thinking of buying a benelli supersport
i have a remmy 1187 with a 28" light contour barrel and it handles beautifully but it does spend most of its life broken.Having used auto's one way or another since I had a pair of Remmies, back in the 70's. I have owned a few makes since then. If you have not shot a Benelli, can I suggest that you do. I have known a lot of people, myself included (and I have had 3), that are unable to live with the 'clunk-click every trip' mechanism. I find the gas operated guns smoother to use. As Hammie has said and I concur, the Beretta is probably one of the best, even if a bit 'over engineered'. The Remmies have really lost the plot since the demise of the original 1100's, and the 1187 in my opinion is too front end heavy, they are very ammo fussy too. The Winchesters I found to be a bit 'clunky' too, it may be the turning bolt head or the synthetic stock vibrating, but it only lasted with me for a month. The Browning, although I have not owned one, I have used a couple and they were too much like the Winchester, also one of the forends was loose. I did have a Fabarm Lion several years back and although 100% reliable, was a bit ammo fussy. It was one of the lightest auto's made at the time, just 6 1/2lbs. That gun fired 1000's of rounds without a hitch, as long as the ammo was 'pokey'. Because I was Instructing at a corporate event venue and they insisted in providing the ammo, some of which would not cycle the Fabarm, I traded it for a Beretta 391 'Field' model, in wood. That weighed close to 7lbs. so was a bit heavier but it was not so ammo fussy even if it was a pig to clean. Because the gun could have in excess of a 1000 rounds through it in a day, it required a strip clean when I got it home. Because the gun was getting knocked about, with the corporate eventing and my pigeon shooting, I hit on the idea of getting the synthetic model. I could shoot that gun superbly, but a lot of the smaller in stature and Female clients found it very heavy to use. It was over 1lbs. heavier that the 'Field' model 391. So, it went and I went back to the 391 'Field', which I have to this day. I have since added a 25 years old mint condition Beretta 303, which I had started to use for all my sporting shooting, keeping it in mint condition and using the 391 for all the roughing it jobs. WOW is that 303 easier to clean (for a gasser) than the 391 though. I can clean it top to bottom inside 15 minutes, no fancy designed pistons, no ruddy gas valves and no carbon all over the forend. Used with Hull Superfast it rarely misbehaves and if it does, I suspect it is me not fully releasing the trigger fast enough. So from a Breda in the 60's to the current Beretta's, I have owned or shot most of them and enjoyed using them, especially on the Trap layouts !
Yes it was.My farther has a Browning B80 and thats been excellent the last 25-30years ive seen him use it and it was the first 12bore I shot with ! I wont let him part with it and would buy it off him in a heart beat.
Interestingly some parts are stamped: PB Beretta, apparently the gun was a joint venture between Browning and beretta.
ATB
Matt
I did exactly the same. Don't know what it was about the Supersport but I just seemed to point it and it hit the clays. My A400 is a nice gun but I just don't have the same affinity with itDon't discount the Benelli until you've tried it. I bought a Supersport several years ago, it never missed a beat and was beautifully engineered....however in one of those moments of madness we all have I swapped it for a Beretta A400 Xcel....huge mistake.
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