Ok, here's the deal. I've been shooting trap, skeet, sporting clays etc for the past 12 years, so take my opinion for what it's worth. I've shot in the World trapshooting championships, so I know a thing or two abotu shooting. I'm not a once a year shooter
Spend the money and do it right the first time! You'll regret it otherwise.
It depends a lot on how much you see yourself shooting though. If you'll be shooting a good bit, find a good new or used over/under. The thing NOBODY has mentioned yet is how hard it is to clean a semi-auto or a pump, compared to an over/under. I shoot a browning citori ultra xt (trap model). It has 32" barrels, with 1" extended chokes, it has an adjustable comb (cheekpiece), and about 2 pounds of added weight in the forearm and reciever. Weight = less recoil, and better stability. I have put easily over 100,000 rounds through it in the 7 years I've ownded it and cleaned it
twice. And it didn't need it either time. I have a feeling most of the guys here only shoot a couple times a year, so they don't clean their guns. If you start shooting 100 rounds each time you go out, and you go out once a week, you'll wind up cleaning a gas operated gun once every month or two (if you care about it at all anyway lol). Remingtons have a TERRIBLE gas system. You couldn't give me an 1100, or 11-87. They were great in their day, but they're the 6.5L compared to the duramax :spit: The duramax being any newer gas operated shotgun. O/U's I'd recommend are about any of them that you'll find for under $1000. Older Ruger Red Lables have problems not resetting the second trigger, so I'd stay away from them, otherwise most will treat you well. But I've tried them all up to $25k Krieghoff's and Perazzi's, and nothing fit (me) like the Browning citori, so thats what I bought. Plus a good
quality O/U will never lose it's value... at all! My citori cost $1900 new, and the same model used now runs anywhere from $1700-2500 depending on condition. The same model new is like $2800 now.
If you'll only shoot maybe once a month, get a QUALTIY semi auto. I'd recommend a browning gold, Beretta 390 or Beretta 391. I shoot a browning gold in the field and it's great. But the beretta 390 is the most durable gun I've ever seen. My father has one (one of his MANY shotguns) and it will shoot and cycle ANY round you can put in it, no matter how clean or dirty it is. And it's a cinch to take a part and clean (as is my browning gold). You need a PHD to disassemble an old remington semi-auto lol. We had a bet to see who's semi-auto could go longer without being cleaned before the first jam happened when I was younger. We were both shooting our semi-autos around 300 rounds/week in the summer and hunting anything we could in the winter. My browning gold made it 4 months, and his Beretta 390 went a year and a half with at a minimum 100rounds/week before the first jam. Thats two shooting seasons and one hunting season. We just oiled them was all. The chamber on his gun STUNK horribly from all the crap that was in it. Hay, dirt, rocks, water, food crumbs, coffee, anythign you can imagine. It looked like black sludge inside the housing, but it still worked great. Now my g/f shoots that gun, and it still works flawlessly, but has been cleaned of course. And both the browning and beretta are gas operated so they don't kick very bad.
If you'll only shoot maybe three or four times a year, then don't bother getting an expensive gun. A pump will suit you fine. The 870 Remington is the old faithful of them all. Cheap, relativley simple, and VERY VERY reliable. Also functions as a boat paddle (ask me how I know
)
My biggest recommendation is get a QUALITY gun. No charles daly's. You get what you pay for. A high dollar gun will fit better, and feel more refined when you shoot it. Most people swear by Benelli's. But if you've shot one more than a couple times a year, then something else as much, you'd know why I detest them. They sound like you need a 5 gallon bucket to catch the parts as they fall out. The newer ones aren't bad, but are way overpriced.
Sorry for the book, but I see three pages of bad information, so I want you to see some good information
Don't get me started on ammo :rofl: