Hi guys,
I had some questions about a gun to use for bear a while ago, and got some good advice here. I finally have the gun all set up after trying some things, and am pretty happy with it.
It is a Rem 870 Tactical 12-gauge pump shotgun with a 6-shot magazine and an 18" cylinder barrel. It came with a pistol grip stock that didn't really work out for me. I replaced that with a Remington plastic replacement stock. I added a stock pack by Eagle Industries, an Aimpoint T1 red dot sight on a Weaver mount (the receiver is drilled and tapped), and a 1-1/4" leather service rifle sling by Creedmoor Sports. And some Krylon. I'm not a fan of black guns.
The most interesting thing about it (to me) is the sight. The little T1 is tiny, tough as nails, and very efficient. On brightness setting 8 of 12 Aimpoint says it will stay on continuously for about 50,000 hours. This setting is plenty for an overcast day. You can still see the dot in bright sun, though not well. I turn it up to 10 for that, but leave it at 8 all other times.
The adjustment caps have two little posts that stick out. To make sight adjustments you unscrew the cap and reverse it, sticking the posts in the adjustment knob. The cap never leaves your hand that way. Pretty convenient compared to coin types.
I have the gun sighted in at ~25 yards with slugs. When I took my last confirmation shot, I put the dot on the mark and pulled the trigger. This gigantic hole appeared that the dot fit inside of. That's pretty satisfying to a guy who is used to a .243 Win., and the tiny gray holes that normally mark my impacts.
Within its range, the gun is fast, accurate, and powerful. Everything you want in a brush gun for bear.
Scott
I had some questions about a gun to use for bear a while ago, and got some good advice here. I finally have the gun all set up after trying some things, and am pretty happy with it.
It is a Rem 870 Tactical 12-gauge pump shotgun with a 6-shot magazine and an 18" cylinder barrel. It came with a pistol grip stock that didn't really work out for me. I replaced that with a Remington plastic replacement stock. I added a stock pack by Eagle Industries, an Aimpoint T1 red dot sight on a Weaver mount (the receiver is drilled and tapped), and a 1-1/4" leather service rifle sling by Creedmoor Sports. And some Krylon. I'm not a fan of black guns.
The most interesting thing about it (to me) is the sight. The little T1 is tiny, tough as nails, and very efficient. On brightness setting 8 of 12 Aimpoint says it will stay on continuously for about 50,000 hours. This setting is plenty for an overcast day. You can still see the dot in bright sun, though not well. I turn it up to 10 for that, but leave it at 8 all other times.
The adjustment caps have two little posts that stick out. To make sight adjustments you unscrew the cap and reverse it, sticking the posts in the adjustment knob. The cap never leaves your hand that way. Pretty convenient compared to coin types.
I have the gun sighted in at ~25 yards with slugs. When I took my last confirmation shot, I put the dot on the mark and pulled the trigger. This gigantic hole appeared that the dot fit inside of. That's pretty satisfying to a guy who is used to a .243 Win., and the tiny gray holes that normally mark my impacts.
Within its range, the gun is fast, accurate, and powerful. Everything you want in a brush gun for bear.
Scott