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Turkey Guns & Shooting => Turkey Guns => Topic started by: Ky Gobbler on March 12, 2013, 08:32:27 PM

Title: Pump shotgun
Post by: Ky Gobbler on March 12, 2013, 08:32:27 PM
I've owned a few pump guns, which are mostly 870's. I've never had this problem before. I just recently got a stoeger p350 and when I shoot 3in or larger shells out of it, the pump slides all the way back on its own and ejects the shell after I shot. Is this an issue?
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: R AJ on March 12, 2013, 08:42:55 PM
Some Winchesters are built that way as well. You must push forward on the forearm as you shoot.
I have had this with happen with big loads in 20s and 12s on Remmys and Mossbergs. It does mess with you when trying to put another shell in.
Old Activ loads in 12 gauge 3" using MAX powder,2 1/4oz. shot would cause that along with some Fiocchi shells as well.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: FL-Boss on March 12, 2013, 08:59:00 PM
My new Rem 870 turkey gun used to do that... with hi power shells.  I wouldn't come all the back.. but about half way.  I sold the gun after that and got auto 11-87... which I should have done in the beginning. I personally didn't like the pump anyway, wont have another.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: btmonnat on March 13, 2013, 05:54:21 AM
I just bought a Winchester SXP and it will do it every shot but I think Winny made it that way. It takes some getting used to.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: Clif Owen on March 13, 2013, 07:42:28 AM
It sounds to me that what we have here is a case of you holding the gun tightly..exactly like you should. Let me ask a question..if you put the gun on sandbags and don't even touch the slide; does it still do this? If not..You are doing it by pulling on it even if you don't realize it. A pump shotgun should ALWAYS release upon firing. That's why you don't need to hit the release switch to ejecty a shell and chamber a new one. If you are good with a pump gun, you casn shoot it nearly as fast as a semi-auto if you get in a hurry. The old Winchesters would shoot as fast as you were capable of shifting it if you held the trigger down and pumped. Kinda like a gunfighter fanning a Peacemaker.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: TWOWITHONE on March 13, 2013, 10:57:51 AM
Have a Winchester1300. Its supposed too do that it was called the speed pump cause you could shoot so many shells in a required time if I remember right. My buddy thought his 1300 was broke and he sold it. Great turkey shotgun also with the right choke and ammo. :firefighter:
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: outdoors on March 13, 2013, 11:16:53 AM
MY MOSSBERG 500 TURKEY THUG DOES THE SAME THING , GREAT FOR A FOLLOW UP
IF NEED NE ...               :smiley-char092:
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: Ky Gobbler on March 13, 2013, 12:15:04 PM
I think I was just holding the gun too tightly because I'm not used to the kick of the magnum loads yet. Next time I shoot it I'll try laying it on a sandbag and see if it still does it.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: tomstopper on March 13, 2013, 12:17:45 PM
Quote from: TWOWITHONE on March 13, 2013, 10:57:51 AM
Have a Winchester1300. Its supposed too do that it was called the speed pump cause you could shoot so many shells in a required time if I remember right. My buddy thought his 1300 was broke and he sold it. Great turkey shotgun also with the right choke and ammo. :firefighter:
:agreed: I love my 1300 and now it will be used as a backup as long as my stoeger 3500 does its job. If not I have old reliable to fall back onto. I will say that I never experienced my slide automatically coming back when I shot though.
Title: Re: Pump shotgun
Post by: Longshanks on March 13, 2013, 12:48:14 PM
I was under the assumption that this is how pump guns work..allows fluent speedy pumping of the gun immediately following the shot. Holding the gun to your shoulder will normally put some back pressure on the forearm. All three of my 870s allow this and my rem .243 pump does the same thing. 870's will turn em loose.. Pump the gun immediately after pulling the trigger and you will be surprised. I've shot pumps for so long allot of times I don't even notice that I pumped in another shell when dove, duck hunting. :z-guntootsmiley: