Spike wrote:I guess I should clarify what I'm looking for. I just want something that I can use for IDPA Multi-Gun SSG or ESG. It says "Pump only in 12 or 20 gauge, with iron sights only. No more than 5 rounds may be loaded in the magazine at any time, 6 rounds max in gun." I don't hunt so I don't need it for that. I don't need to be a tactical operator and I'm not going to be competing in the Nationals.
The idea is to try something new, gain some skills, and have fun.
- Spike
I'd take a piece of paper, and make 3 sections on it. Write one of each in each section: Mossberg 500, Remington 870, Winchester 1300. (My personal bias would make me hope to hit the 870 or the 1300 first!)
Then tape it to the wall, put on a blindfold, and throw a dart. Closest section wins. (the differences are so small that a "total noob" may not really care or notice.) for example: Tang safety or trigger guard safety? Who cares, you'll get used to either one
unless you are particularly picky about such things like me. even if you are, it still makes a no real difference either way.Same can be said for barrel length, type of sights, wood vs. synthetic, what choke to use, etc. The differences are small enough that unless you are competing with the best guys there, you won't care what you have. I'd have to say though, you surely want a smoothbore over a rifled barrel... Smooth you can shoot both just fine, rifled can only shoot one type well.
I'm not a 3 gun guy (yet, or ever, not real concerned right now), but the same applies to self defense, shooting games, or hunting. I've outshot guys with guns costing 5x as much as mine, and have also been outshot with guns cheaper than mine. The focus should be on your skills, not the gun, for any beginner in any discipline. If you aren't certain, don't sink tons of money into something you aren't sure you'll like. Get something fairly mainstream, so if you don't like it, you can re-sell it without a huge loss.