Thomas has sent me interesting instruction to make an inexpensive vertical homemade gun holder. Thomas, thank you very much for photos and info.
Advice
Remington 870 Front Sight Fell Off
Remington 870 Front Sight Fell Off
I have heard about such problem when front sight falls out of it’s groove and now I can show you photos which I took on the range. There were shooter with Remington 870 and front sight just fell off after several shots. Front sight was lost forever in a snow. Happily I have one spare standard dovetail front sight which I have given to the shooter.
Any ideas of how to avoid such problem? Please leave a comment.
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Must Have Remington 870 Repair Kit, Parts which every owner need
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How to Unload a Pump Action Shotgun, Safely without Racking
Video which shows how to unload a pump action shotgun, safely without racking.
- February 1, 2012
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When to Use a Handgun vs. a Shotgun for Home Defense
Good article by Jason Hanson from http://www.concealedcarryacademy.com
When to Use a Handgun vs. a Shotgun for Home Defense
If you wake up at 2:00am to the sound of a window being smashed and you hear someone entering your house, here’s what you should ideally do: Gather all of your family members together in the same room, lock the door, call the police and have your gun ready in case the intruder should try and enter that room.
The Most Common Mistake Made By New Shotgunners
Video which shows the most common mistake made by new shotgunners
- January 14, 2012
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Customer Service Experience with Remington (Broken Ejector, Remington 870 Tactical)
Thanks to Eric for sharing his customer service experience with Remington company.
Zeroing Remington 870 Shotgun, Instructions, Photo
This information is from my ebook about Remington 870:
Zeroing is one of the first procedures you need to make to use your Remington 870 efficiently. The best ammunition for zeroing is slugs. Zeroing should be performed with a shotgun on a gun rest; this will enable you to hold shotgun still and make zeroing more reliable.
Make several shots (3 is enough) at a target which located on distance of 30-50 meters. Check results and make adjustments if needed.
Windage is horizontal adjustment of your sight.
Eleveation is vertical adjustment of your sight.
Shotgun Buckshot Ammo Test (Federal, Rio, Remington, Personal Defense)
Shotgun Buckshot Ammo Test by Jonathan Paul
I would like to start off this review with a big thanks to Steven at BulkAmmo.com and Vitaly of Rem870.com for the opportunity to do this review. Vitaly put me in contact with Steven who provided most of the buckshot used in this review.
There are five types of buckshot that were evaluated for this review. Four of them were provided by Steven of BulkAmmo.com and one was from my personal stash. All 12 ga ammo shells tested were 2 ¾” 9-pellet 00 buckshot, the details of each are as follows:
Shotgun Buckshot Ammo Test (Federal, Rio, Remington, Personal Defense)
Brand | Muzzle Velocity* | Model |
---|---|---|
Federal Ammunition – Buckshot** |
1325 fps | XM127 00AC |
Rio Ammunition – Royal Buck Low Recoil |
1200 fps | RBLR129 |
Rio Ammunition – Royal Buck |
1345 fps | RB129 |
Remington – Buckshot |
1325 fps | 12B00 |
Federal Premium Ammunition – Personal Defense |
1145 fps | PD132 00 |
*muzzle velocity as listed on packaging, no chronograph data was collected
**this was from my personal supply, all other ammunition was provided by BulkAmmo.com
Overview
Opening these boxes of buckshot immediately put a smile on my face. Having recently only been shooting cheap, bulk pack, birdshot it was refreshing to see the tall, shiny brass these manufacturers use for their buckshot hulls. Despite how pretty they looked, I knew there would be two factors that would be weighed more heavily than all others: extreme spread at various distances and felt recoil.
Extreme Spread
I tested the five loads at 3 different distances, 7 paces, 14 paces, and 25 paces. My target was a large piece of cardboard, covered with waxed paper when necessary to extend the usefulness of the target. The shotgun used was a Remington 870 with 20” improved cylinder barrel. The following table shows the results of firing one round of each type at each range and measuring the extreme spread:
Load | 7 Paces | 14 Paces | 25 Paces |
---|---|---|---|
Federal Ammunition – Buckshot** |
4 inches | 6.75 inches | 14.8 inches |
Rio Ammunition – Royal Buck Low Recoil |
4 inches | 9.5 inches | 10.6 inches |
Rio Ammunition – Royal Buck |
4.8 inches | 10.8 inches | 16.25 inches |
Remington – Buckshot |
3.3 inches | 9.3 inches | 14.2 inches |
Federal Premium Ammunition – Personal Defense |
1.5 inches | 3.1 inches | 5.75 inches |
As you can see the Federal Personal Defense with the FliteControl wad dominated the extreme spread test with 25-pace results that were better than any other type’s 14-pace result. Also of interest is the tighter pattern produced by the Rio Low Recoil when compared to the full-velocity Rio Royal Buck load.
Felt Recoil
While obviously very subjective, I feel confident making a few comments on felt recoil as I was one shooter, shooting the same gun over the course of about 1 hour, the only change was the loading and the distance I was shooting at. Once I got home and started working on this article I found that the perceived recoil of each load directly corresponded to the velocity listed on the ammo boxes. Which considering they were all 9-pellet 00 buck loads makes sense. The Royal Buck had the most perceived recoil and was maybe 5% harder than the Federal Buckshot (which I used as my baseline). The recoil produced by the Remington shell was indistinguishable from that of the Federal baseline load. The Rio Low Recoil had considerably less recoil than any of the three full-velocity loads. The Personal Defense, moving 55 fps slower than the Rio Low Recoil, had the lowest perceived recoil.
I can see from BulkAmmo.com’s offerings that another buckshot roundup will be in order, but until then I think I’m going to stock up on Federal Premium Personal Defense buckshot to keep loaded for home defense and probably a bunch of Rio Low Recoil buckshot for matches or practice. Keep in mind my Remington 870 is a pump action shotgun and doesn’t have a problem cycling these low recoil shells. Always test your chosen ammunition for cycling and patterning before relying on it for competition or personal defense.
Thanks to the http://www.bulkammo.com/ for ammunition for the test.
Useful links:
Low Recoil Ammo by Rio Royal – 00 Buck
2ga Ammo by Rio Royal – 00 Buck
12ga Ammo by Remington – 00 Buck
12ga Ammo by Federal Law Enforcement with FliteControl Wad- 00 Buck
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Exotic 12 Gauge Ammo Review, Part 1
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Interview with Brian Hoffner from Hoffners Training Academy, Part 2
This is second part of the interview with Brian D. Hoffner, Director of the Hoffners Training Academy. Check the first part of the interview with Brian Hoffner.
Interview with Brian Hoffner from Hoffners Training Academy, Part 1
Shotgun Shooting Tips
Shotgun Shooting Tips
Here are some tips which will help you in shotgun shooting:
- Proper shooting stance. It is very important to train a proper shooting stance. Train it everyday when dry fire, this builds your muscle memory. Believe me, dry firing will improve your results dramatically.
- Control your breath when shooting slugs. It is not that important when you shoot birdshots or buckshots.
- Control your trigger finger. This is important when shooting slugs. Pull the trigger smoothly.
- Don’t anticipate a recoil. This is very easy to test, ask your friend to load your shotgun with several rounds, one of them will be a dummy shell. If you are anticipating recoil you will notice how you push a shotgun forward when pulling the trigger and think that it is going to fire.
- Keep both eyes open. This is very important. Using both eyes when aiming will give you better depth perception and a peripheral vision. This is very good habit for defensive shooting.
- Choose a stock of a proper length.
- Test the ammunition and find that one which works best with your shotgun.
Can you add any other shotgun shooting tips?
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Remington 870 Shotgun Guide: Disassembly, Reassembly, Cleaning, Shooting, Upgrades and Repair