oneounceload
Moderator
If it is chambered for 3 inch shells, it will say so on the barrel
It doesn't??? Well, let me name a few: Weatherby, Winchester, Browning, Nikko, Howa . . . need I go on? Besides, they just make the Citori to someone else's specification and design.Japan doesn't have a history of turning out some of the world's best guns.
Agreed. But what does that have to do with the quality of their steel and machine tools industry?Japan is a very anti-gun society
Yes, and yet both nations have turned out some of the most poorly-made firearms ever seen.Belgium has earned a reputation for fine old-world craftsmanship with regard to firearms. So has Italy.
Citori does not make a shotgun, it is a shotgun, a model of over/under shotgun, to be exact. And the price asked for a Citori is not top dollar, it is actually a very reasonable price when you consider the amount of time and labor it takes to make an O/U shotgun. If you want top dollar, buy a Merkel or a Perazzi. They will set you back several times the cost of a Citori. A Beretta that costs less than a Citori will shoots loose within a few thousand rounds, go back and look at the Citori at that time.The bottom line is that, while Citori makes a decent shotgun, I don't feel that there is anything all that special about them that would cause me to pay top dollar for one.
"Salt wood" is wood that has been dried by applying salt to the outside of the wood during drying and curing to accelerate the process. After WWII, the large supplies of walnut had been used up (the weapons industries had gobbled up everything), and curing the wood takes many years, so people tried to figure out how to make walnut lumber quickly. Salt curing worked well for furniture wood, so why not firearms stocks? FN guns made after 1960 used walnut that had been cured using salt, and these guns were notorious for rusting below the stock line. Japanese Brownings use aged walnut from the US, and "salt wood" should not be an issue.I see some mention of "salt wood" in some sales info online. Can someone explain what I am to be looking for?
Several reasons why I would consider a Citori over a Beretta:tell me why I'd consider a New Japanese Citori over a New Beretta in the same general price range
Rental guns are usually the cheapest good guns available. While there are cheaper O/U shotguns, they are not very good. And while there are better O/U shotguns available, they are not cheap. A few hundred dollars may not make much of a difference to you or me, multiply it times several dozen guns, and it adds up. While many club guns do get shot a lot, most do not. Serious shooters will buy their own shotguns, and many people bring their field guns for a pre-season warm-up session at the trap or skeet range.Why is it that most rentals tend to be Beretta White Onyxes (at least from my observation) if these guns shake apart after a couple thousand rounds?
Yes, it is stamped on the left side of the top barrel, right next to the Browning address and the gauge/chamber designation.My brother in law has one and I asked him if it was Belgian or Jap and he had no idea. After breaking it down I finally found the "made in japan" hidden inside the works. They don't seem very proud of it. Has anybody ever seen it on the outside?
My brother in law has one and I asked him if it was Belgian or Jap and he had no idea. After breaking it down I finally found the "made in japan" hidden inside the works. They don't seem very proud of it. Has anybody ever seen it on the outside?