aspeedyturtle wrote:spyder357 wrote:Just want to echo what Belgiboy said.
I was in the same boat, a friend of mine advised me to wait a bit for the right deal and to save up a few more bucks.
Ended up getting a used Citori lightning for 1k, in mint, perfect, looked like it had never been fired condition. Today it might even sell for a bit more despite all the pheasant hunting seasons Ive put on it in 10 years.
Honestly I wont ever sell it I like it so much.
from some quick looking it seems like all the higher end guns all have ejectors. any ideas what guns ~$1000 have extractors so i'm not having to pick spent shells off the ground? or am I just going to have to deal with ejectors?
grousemaster wrote:aspeedyturtle wrote:spyder357 wrote:Just want to echo what Belgiboy said.
I was in the same boat, a friend of mine advised me to wait a bit for the right deal and to save up a few more bucks.
Ended up getting a used Citori lightning for 1k, in mint, perfect, looked like it had never been fired condition. Today it might even sell for a bit more despite all the pheasant hunting seasons Ive put on it in 10 years.
Honestly I wont ever sell it I like it so much.
from some quick looking it seems like all the higher end guns all have ejectors. any ideas what guns ~$1000 have extractors so i'm not having to pick spent shells off the ground? or am I just going to have to deal with ejectors?
Is bending over and picking up shells really an issue? Sure makes reloads faster having ejectors if it's a hunting gun.
smurfman wrote:For a new gun in that price range, you are going to be disappointed in the long run if not the short one. Anything much under a grand will have a number of shortcuts made which will give you nothing but problems. Fixing such a gun is much like fixing an AM transistor radio- it will cost much more than its worth IF you can even find someone to work on it.
If you are patient and shop around you could find a fixed choke Browning Citori or Beretta of some sort, an SKB/Weatherby, or even Ruger around that price. The latter two you might even find with interchangeable chokes.
In any event you are probably going to be looking at field guns as they are more common and less expensive to begin with. They will typically be shot less so should have less likelihood of mechanical problems early in.
Ejectors can be disconnected but it is simpler, easier, and cheaper (if you don't do it yourself) to put your hand over the chamber to block the hulls from popping out. then you can have ejectors if you need them.
If you are pretty much stuck with your price range, a pump like a Remington 870 or Winchester Model 12 would be a good fit as would a semiauto such as a Beretta 303/390/391, Browning Gold, or Remington 1100. These are quality firearms and have proven themselves over time. Buy quality first, price second, action type someplace further back. A quality pump will serve you much better than a cheap O/U under even moderate use.
grimbeaver wrote:I picked up a used Ruger Red Label for about $900 that I use as a target gun. Personally I don't collect my shells so the ejectors are nice. I have a friend who has no problems catching them as they come out of his Citori. However I recommend doing the math on reloading before you go through the hassle. Some people argue their reloads are more like Winchester AA's, but still when you compare the cost to the cheap ammo boxes at around $6.50 a box everything I've heard is you save maybe a dollar per box, which means it will take a while just to pay off the equipment.
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