Red Beans 504 wrote:Was thinking about a hogue over molded forend for the duck setup. Any thoughts on that vs the speed feed forend?
I couldn't really say. Never tried the stock or fore-end myself, but I do have a Hogue pistol grip with the same rubber overmolding, and it is pretty tacky stuff. It's a decent pistol grip for the most part (as long as you're not shooting heavy stuff one-handed), but it's not my favorite due in pat to the rubber's tack. That might be a good thing for you though, if you want something that a cold or gloved hand is unlikely to slip on. Plenty of folks seem to like the rubberizing, and Hogue makes some good stuff - I love the Hogue cocobolo wood grips my S&W 19-4 is wearing. However, I'm really not a fan of soft, overly-grabby surfaces on my guns. I feel it slows down handling, and I
hate having stuff grab and pull my clothing around (same reason I like leather seats in cars). That's personal preference though.
One thing I will mention is that I've seen a few reports of Hogue 870 fore-ends rubbing or catching on the receiver when the slide is all the way back. It's an easy problem to remedy if it comes up though, so I wouldn't worry too much about it. I suggested the SpeedFeed because it's a nice minimalist fore-end that you already have; but if you think you might want a really grippy fore-end instead, go ahead and give the Hogue a try.
but if you're looking at alternate fore-ends, another way you could go is a long fore-end like what most hunting Express models come with. These are nice because they let you support the gun closer to the receiver, something I've seen folks do while clay-shooting. What I find real funny is when someone has a short fore-end on their gun because it's "tactical", but then when they're swinging the thing, they take their hand off the fore-end and hold onto the magazine tube behind it. A long fore-end gives you more freedom to support the gun in the way that you find most comfortable without adding steps for cycling the gun, and if your hand slips, it's far less likely to get caught between the fore-end & receiver and cause poor ejection or short-strokes. A long fore-end also provides more protection for the magazine tube in case you fall or drop the gun on your way to the duck blind.