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Who here uses a Benelli Nova or SuperNova for wingshooting?
What gauge do you use for which species? Does the mercury recoil reducer for the 12 ga. really work for those with this option? This is or was an option for these gun models from Benelli.
Why Benelli Nova pumps? They are cheap and I gather they are also good. With pumps, you get at least three shots with a mag plug. Pumps are reliable and fairly easy to clean. Gas autoloaders get nasty to clean. Inertia drive autoloaders may feed unreliably with different loads or kick too hard for some. I have a Remington 870 police pump but find it crude. I have had Mossberg 500 and a 590 police pumps and found the finish on those guns to be cheesy. Though they were easy to load shells and unload shells. My 870 is a real bear to load and unload. I'm not a fan of Browning, Ithaca or Winchester pumps.
I'm interested in taking up wingshooting and also buying into the the Benelli Nova line. The name sounds cool and they look modern and super neat. The name Benelli gives a sense of European craftsmanship and prestige at Mossberg prices. Twice-barreled guns are too rich for my blood and I don't like the looks of the "cheap" ones.
Why Benelli Nova pumps? They are cheap and I gather they are also good. With pumps, you get at least three shots with a mag plug. Pumps are reliable and fairly easy to clean. Gas autoloaders get nasty to clean. Inertia drive autoloaders may feed unreliably with different loads or kick too hard for some. I have a Remington 870 police pump but find it crude. I have had Mossberg 500 and a 590 police pumps and found the finish on those guns to be cheesy. Though they were easy to load shells and unload shells. My 870 is a real bear to load and unload. I'm not a fan of Browning, Ithaca or Winchester pumps.
I'm interested in taking up wingshooting and also buying into the the Benelli Nova line. The name sounds cool and they look modern and super neat. The name Benelli gives a sense of European craftsmanship and prestige at Mossberg prices. Twice-barreled guns are too rich for my blood and I don't like the looks of the "cheap" ones.
Replies
When I was in the sales side of the trade, the Nova was a strictly a 3.5" chamber proposition. I'm guessing that's the Super Nova now, and the Nova is a 3" and shorter platform?
At any rate, you're gonna want to pick up a 3.5" gun and swing it before you lay your money down. I've never held a 3.5" gun by any manufacturer that didn't feel like I was trying to maneuver a heavy iron pipe. That slow, steady swing is OK for high-flying geese, or for long range turkey where you're not really swinging the gun at all, but I find them REALLY sluggish for upland-type shooting.
If Remington still makes the "Light Contour" barrel, adding one to your Police 870 can make for a pretty responsive platform, if you can get over the fact that you'll have a blued Wingmaster barrel on your flat-finish cop gun.
Mossberg does one 28" walnut model: https://www.mossberg.com/product/500-hunting-all-purpose-field-classic-50126/ and I've been favorably impressed by the metal finish on my birch-stocked 28" bird/ 24" slug combo model. It's been a dove killin' machine.
"Nothing is safe from stupid." - Zee
As a combat gun, or one you have to keep feeding while distracted (like on a busy dove opener), I find that the Mossy is more resistant to the "brain farts" or fumbles that less dedicated shotgunners are prone to. The ejection port is bigger than that of an 870, so it's easier to load your first round on an empty gun through there. The shell lifter is "hard linked" to the position of the forend - if the action is open, the lifter is locked DOWN and the only way to load a round is to the open ejection port; if the action is closed, the lifter is locked UP and is totally out of your way to allow easy loading of the magazine without finger/glove pinching. If you accidentally load a round facing backwards in the magazine on an 870 (and probably any other gun with a flappy shell lifter), it will shoot backwards on top of the shell lifter, but still have its rim retained by the shell latches - totally locking up the gun until you can get in around the lifter with some narrow pokey tool and trip the shell latches. On a Mossberg, just grab the shell and pry it out. The tang safety is not only ambidextrous and intuitive as to which direction does what, but it is easier to run in either direction while holding the gun in a wider variety of positions and does not have the amateur's trigger finger wandering around dangerously in search of a button.
I know the Benelli autoloaders fairly well. Their trigger groups seem fairly heavily inspired by Remington, but are less solid-state with semi-permanent staking and more easily worked on. I would assume the Nova to be mostly a manual version of the same.
A Nova is not going to have the same ability to shim the stock for comb height and cast like the Benelli autoloaders will. Those shims install in the juncture between the stock and receiver. Since the Nova's stock is part of the receiver, you're stuck with the angles they give you.
So that's just the mechanics. Beyond that, a reliable pump gun for most conditions is not a hard thing to find. Wingshooting, however, is more like buying shoes - the gun has to fit you, and nobody else can tell you what will. You have to try on several.
"Nothing is safe from stupid." - Zee
I mainly wanted to hear from folks here who already own the Nova or Super Nova and actually use their guns in the uplands.