User Panel
Quoted:
Just thought I'd get the GD's opinion on which is better and why. 870 Express Tactical Riot, or the 590 Persuader. They are close enough on price that it doesn't matter. They weigh the same. The Persuader has a 20" barrel with 8 2 3/4 capacity as opposed to the 870 with an 18" barrel and a capacity of 6. What say ye? Ithaca 37! |
|
Quoted: Quoted: steel vs aluminum. In my book the 870 steel receiver wins over aluminum or plastic. That shows you don't know anything about either. On both, the bolt locks into an extension on the barrel. Steel on steel for either design. You could make a receiver out of paper mache and it wouldn't matter because the locking is steel on steel. Aluminum is lighter and it can't rust, a common problem with the 870. The 870, well it depends on the finish for rusting (as well as the finish on any gun's steel parts). I was so used to running around with ARs that didn't rust that when I got back from hunting with my 870 one year I just wiped the water off and put it in the case for the ride home. She was a mess when I pulled her out a day later. |
|
I think the Mossberg has a number of advantages as a tactical shotgun, which is covered pretty well here: http://www.members.tripod.com/~jth8260/870.html. For me, the biggest advantage is the location of the slide release and safety on the Mossberg and the fact that it has two ejectors. Personally I use a Remington, just because that is the manual of arms I am familiar with.
Some say that Remington has better quality. I have purchased a number of shotguns from both companies, and have never had any problems with either. |
|
Both are nice shotguns but I prefer the 870 even though I am a lefty. Especially since I found a left hand conversion safety.
|
|
I think both are good shotguns. I have both, but being a "Lefty", the ergonomics of the my 590A1 works better for me......
|
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
steel vs aluminum. In my book the 870 steel receiver wins over aluminum or plastic. That shows you don't know anything about either. On both, the bolt locks into an extension on the barrel. Steel on steel for either design. You could make a receiver out of paper mache and it wouldn't matter because the locking is steel on steel. Aluminum is lighter and it can't rust, a common problem with the 870. This is similar to the, "Who wants a plastic gun?" comments in reference to polymer pistols...which, of course, represents a complete lack of understanding of both the material and what it's expected to do. |
|
Owned an 870 years ago was a great gun.
My buddy owns a 870 that he uses as a duck gun. Never cleaned it and has been using it for trap/duck for over 10 years. He lubes it up every now and again. Runs like a top according to him. Not much experience with the Mossy besides shooting a buddies. |
|
Quoted: Quoted: What a bunch of crap. What is Mossberg's problem? I guess their lawyers tell them to say that to keep them from being liable for idiots. Remington won't do it either, go a head and try to order a part for the trigger group. Remington sent me a complete trigger group for my 597, so I don't know what you're talking about. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Mossbergs are junk compared to Remingtons. Why? I've never owned a remington shotgun. What makes them better? As far as the 870 goes, they aren't made from fragile parts, they aren't all loosy-goosy, they don't fall apart, they don't have extraction problems... Not to mention that piece of shit tang safety breaks in a home defense situation, if you're lucky it renders the gun inoperable unsafe, if you're unlucky, it makes it unsafe inoperable. I get it depends on your situation. The 500 this happened to me on was a field gun, a hunting gun, I can live with it going down in the field, I can't live with it going off at an inopportune time because it caught a twig or branch. Fuck, I just looked and it's still where I put it, in a box, 10 years ago. I was 19 when this happened, I had emailed Mossberg about sending me the parts to fix it, and they refused because I wasn't a gun smith. So I put it in a box and bought an 870. http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn203/kuraki556/Untitled-1.jpg Maybe I'll try and fix it now that I have a little more knowledge and resources for parts. Save it for a beater truck gun. The debate is between the 590 and the 870. That's a 500. |
|
I own the cheapest mossberg made, a Maverick and I can say that I beat the shit out of it, put alot of shells through it and it hasn't failed me once. I had one jam when I put a shell in backwards like a moran. Its not like the 870 is a bad shotgun. I like my Mossberg, though. But people tend to just pick the more expensive gun/part in polls like these. Mossberg got rid of the single rail shit awhile ago, even the maverick has two.
|
|
I have a 590 special purpose and an 870 police. I personally like the 590 better for the controls and extra capacity.
However both are great weapons and has its pros and cons. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile |
|
Quoted:
The safety on my 590 broke at a three gun shoot. I had to press the safety forward with my thumb or it would not fire. I found out here afterwards that this is a common problem with Mossbergs and there are aftermarket metal safeties that do not malfunction. If it had been for real at a minimum I would have had to abandon the shotgun and use a pistol, if all you had was a 590 it'd be a good way to get dead. 870 also has a better placement of the safety (well for righties at least, I guess). I'd look around for a used Wingmaster instead of an Express (the cheapo line) although my 870 that I hunt with is an Express and it has been fine. http://www.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=6&f=1&t=282166 Was it a 590A1? |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Remington won't do it either, go a head and try to order a part for the trigger group. Remington sent me a complete trigger group for my 597, so I don't know what you're talking about. "Complete trigger group" != "Part for the trigger group". |
|
Quoted: I called them, with the parts list in my hand, they said "Which parts would you like?" To which I replied, "This one and this one and this one." They would have given me any combination I asked for.Quoted: Quoted: Remington won't do it either, go a head and try to order a part for the trigger group. Remington sent me a complete trigger group for my 597, so I don't know what you're talking about. "Complete trigger group" != "Part for the trigger group". |
|
Quoted: Quoted: The safety on my 590 broke at a three gun shoot. I had to press the safety forward with my thumb or it would not fire. I found out here afterwards that this is a common problem with Mossbergs and there are aftermarket metal safeties that do not malfunction. If it had been for real at a minimum I would have had to abandon the shotgun and use a pistol, if all you had was a 590 it'd be a good way to get dead. 870 also has a better placement of the safety (well for righties at least, I guess). I'd look around for a used Wingmaster instead of an Express (the cheapo line) although my 870 that I hunt with is an Express and it has been fine. http://www.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=6&f=1&t=282166 Was it a 590A1? I think it's a regular 590, but I'll have to look |
|
I want an old, wood stock parkerized 870 police "riot gun" and a 590A1.
Or, get both. P.S. I have an 870 Marine Magnum, two old Wingmasters that were my grandfather's (16 and 20 gauge) and a Westernfield (Mossberg) 500A. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
I went with Remington only for the reason that I have had jamming issues with mossbergs. I believe the big selling point is that the 870 uses two slide bars for the pump and the Mossberg only one. Isn't that what Mossy owners used to say about the 870??? Mossbergs have two slide bars. The parts aren't all delicate and breakable, and they eject just fine. Jesus, some of the shit you guys post is wild. The older Mossbergs have a single slide bar and I guess Mossberg has since updated to the two bar design, to keep it from binding (common complaint). They updated at least in the mid-80s! Good grief,what kind of ancient Mossbergs are you guys finding? Only Mossberg's crappy rebranded Maverick line has had single action bars in the last 25 years or so. Even my bargain basement mid 80s Mossy 500 Sporter has dual action bars (and I might add,an aluminum safety,which is what they used for years before they switched to plastic). If there's a point about Mossberg 500s that is annoying,it's the plastic trigger guard assembly. Anyway,the original question is the 590/590A1,which is a completely different animal that has always had dual action bars,a completely different magazine tube design,aluminum trigger guard (590A1)and a different barrel style. |
|
Mossberg.
The tang safety does it for me. Had a Remmy, trigger safeties are the suck. Otherwise, it's good gun. |
|
Depends on your intended use. The Mossberg 590 is a dedicated combat shotgun. The 870 is so modular that it can be a hunting shotgun or a combat shotgun with some easy parts changing. I own both, and I like the action of the Mossberg better, but the fit, and finish of my 870P is far better than my 590A1.
|
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
What a bunch of crap. What is Mossberg's problem? I guess their lawyers tell them to say that to keep them from being liable for idiots. Remington won't do it either, go a head and try to order a part for the trigger group. Remington sent me a complete trigger group for my 597, so I don't know what you're talking about. RIF I said a PART for the trigger group. They will send you a COMPLETE trigger group with no problems. Trust me this gunsmith knows what he is talking about |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
I called them, with the parts list in my hand, they said "Which parts would you like?" To which I replied, "This one and this one and this one." They would have given me any combination I asked for.
Quoted:
Quoted:
Remington won't do it either, go a head and try to order a part for the trigger group. Remington sent me a complete trigger group for my 597, so I don't know what you're talking about. "Complete trigger group" != "Part for the trigger group". No they wouldn't have |
|
Quoted:
i own mossy's and rem's in a couple of different flavors - both mossberg and remington make good shotguns - you will not be dissapointed with either This. I own both and use both regularly. You will not be disappointed with either. |
|
I can only speak about the Remington 870, but the ones I've used worked perfectly. A lot more recoil than an 1100 though.
|
|
Quoted:
870 - just a better made shotgun. What makes yo say that? |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Mossbergs are junk compared to Remingtons. Why? I've never owned a remington shotgun. What makes them better? As far as the 870 goes, they aren't made from fragile parts, they aren't all loosy-goosy, they don't fall apart, they don't have extraction problems... Not to mention that piece of shit tang safety breaks, if you're lucky it renders the gun inoperable, if you're unlucky, it makes it unsafe. I bought a 20 gauge mossberg for $40 with no buttstock and a broken safety button. The safety still worked fine, just hard to use. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
I went with Remington only for the reason that I have had jamming issues with mossbergs. I believe the big selling point is that the 870 uses two slide bars for the pump and the Mossberg only one. Isn't that what Mossy owners used to say about the 870??? Mossbergs have two slide bars. The parts aren't all delicate and breakable, and they eject just fine. Jesus, some of the shit you guys post is wild. The 870 has always been made with dual action bars. The mossberg used to only be made with one. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
870 - just a better made shotgun. I own both and can honestly say that is NOT the case with the ones I own. Wingmaster or express? The express uses more stamped parts and doesn't get the same level of fitting a wingmaster does. |
|
Quoted:
Been skeet shooting with a couple freinds that were shooting Mossbergs, one a 12 ga, the other a 20ga. They were both having the problem of a live round being pumped out of the mag. tube and flying out the ejection port. Then you pull the trigger on an empty chamber. That's got to be the loudest click in the world. At first I thought they were short stroking and not getting one out of the mag, so I stood were I could really watch them and saw the live round come out right behind the hull. This happened at least 10 times in 200 rounds, from two different 500's. I lost a lot of faith in 500's that day. I would love to know if that is a common problem. I've been told here on arfcom that mossbergs never did that, but every one my father, uncle, or myself have owned did it if you ran the action hard. |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
steel vs aluminum. In my book the 870 steel receiver wins over aluminum or plastic. That shows you don't know anything about either. On both, the bolt locks into an extension on the barrel. Steel on steel for either design. You could make a receiver out of paper mache and it wouldn't matter because the locking is steel on steel. Aluminum is lighter and it can't rust, a common problem with the 870. Well, this shows that you actually DONT KNOW SHIT. See, I just fixed a broken mossburg 500 for a friend.... the receiver was severely scarred (from the steel bolt and carrier grinding back and forth) on the inside, to the point of hindering function. The parts have given the aluminum receiver A SERIOUS BEATING. This was only part of the guns problems.... I've owned a 590, and thought it a good gun.... .... before seeing what serious use will do to a Mossy... After seeing this... for me it's steel Remingtons from now on... |
|
I like the feel and fit of the 870 over the 590, but I like the position of the slide lock and safety on the Mossberg. The 590's length of pull is just ridiculous, IMO, it's like they sized it for guys who can touch their feet with their hands standing straight up without crouching.
I've owned both, and wouldn't feel bad about having either (just so long as I can put a Bantam stock on the 590, or saw some off of the regular stock). That said, I shoot a Benelli now, soooooo... |
|
Quoted:
Love my 870!! First gun i ever bought. That does not make it better |
|
My opinion: The Wingmaster is a much better made shotgun, the Express is still a darn good shotgun, the Mossburg is rattly and feels cheap.
I have used all three for hunting in the field. I sold the Mossburg to by a Wingmaster. |
|
Get both (of course).
I own both, and like shooting both designs. They are both quite reliable. I like shooting my Mossberg more, but it's really just a matter of personal preference. |
|
Quoted:
870 Solid steal. 3" magnum. You're going to jail for stealing someone else's 870. |
|
Every time I have seen a pump gun lock up, its been a mossberg.
I don't like the safety placement or operation on the 870. I didn't like how cheaply made my 870 express seemed. But I got a hold of a genuine 870 police magnum and its every bit the work of art I was hoping for in the first place. |
|
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
The safety on my 590 broke at a three gun shoot. I had to press the safety forward with my thumb or it would not fire. I found out here afterwards that this is a common problem with Mossbergs and there are aftermarket metal safeties that do not malfunction. If it had been for real at a minimum I would have had to abandon the shotgun and use a pistol, if all you had was a 590 it'd be a good way to get dead. 870 also has a better placement of the safety (well for righties at least, I guess). I'd look around for a used Wingmaster instead of an Express (the cheapo line) although my 870 that I hunt with is an Express and it has been fine. http://www.ar15.com/forums/topic.html?b=6&f=1&t=282166 Was it a 590A1? I think it's a regular 590, but I'll have to look No there is a difference ! about the same as a 870 and 870P . |
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
870 - just a better made shotgun. I own both and can honestly say that is NOT the case with the ones I own. Wingmaster or express? The express uses more stamped parts and doesn't get the same level of fitting a wingmaster does. Express |
|
I have two Mossberg 500s. One is older than I am (23 years) and the other is relatively new. I have shot thousands upon thousands of rounds out of both(more so the older one of course) and have not had any problems what so ever. My father has a Remington 870 and I just dont like how they feel and where the safety is but I'm use to something else.
|
|
Quoted:
so much Mossberg hate ! someone needs to tell the Marines their 590A1s suck ass. OP go with the Mossy The 870 express Tactical has QC issues http://i542.photobucket.com/albums/gg428/mcwherterj_photos/IMG_0075_0498.jpg Well to be fair, everyone knows that the armchair commandos here put their guns through more abuse shooting at the range on the weekends than the Marines fighting overseas. |
|
Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: steel vs aluminum. In my book the 870 steel receiver wins over aluminum or plastic. That shows you don't know anything about either. On both, the bolt locks into an extension on the barrel. Steel on steel for either design. You could make a receiver out of paper mache and it wouldn't matter because the locking is steel on steel. Aluminum is lighter and it can't rust, a common problem with the 870. Well, this shows that you actually DONT KNOW SHIT. See, I just fixed a broken mossburg 500 for a friend.... the receiver was severely scarred (from the steel bolt and carrier grinding back and forth) on the inside, to the point of hindering function. The parts have given the aluminum receiver A SERIOUS BEATING. This was only part of the guns problems.... I've owned a 590, and thought it a good gun.... .... before seeing what serious use will do to a Mossy... After seeing this... for me it's steel Remingtons from now on... Did he never oil it or clean it or something? FWIW there are plenty of heavily used AR15s out there with aluminum receivers that run just fine. My guess is the breakdown had less to do with the materials used and more to do with the lack of proper maintenance. |
|
870 hands down.
A sleaker weapon, cleaner lines and superior manufacturing. And I don't even like shotguns that much. But yeah, 870 is a nice shotgun. |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.