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Neutral stock shotguns

4.9K views 26 replies 20 participants last post by  Tyler94  
#1 ·
I’m a left handed shooter who has learned to get by with right handed guns. I shot thousands of rounds thru a Remington peerless, and was very good with it. I’m also having a left hand browning 725 sporting shipped to me. But at that price I don’t know how many left cast guns I can afford. Are there any neutral cast guns out there that are affordable? I tried to shoot a right cast 725 and seemed worse than any other right hand gun I have ever tried.
 
#19 ·
Allow me to disagree. When I had turn from right- to leftsided shooting I sold both of my Remmies, as both had right cast. And I really miss that neat 870 LW 20ga!


Now I have a Browning 525 LH, and it indeed has a slight cast. But it is a heavy and somewhat clumsy gun - I do not fully like it, although it hits the geese well. I also have a AYA XXV boxlock 12ga, which a gunsmith bended to the left, and I like to shoot that more than the 525, as it is a light and fastly shouldered gun. I have also altered the stock of a Heym o/u double rifle, but have not tried to shoot it yet.
 
#10 ·
I bought a LH Beretta 693 at a dealer that specializes in LH-ers. Could choose between 7-8 Browning or Beretta LH OU's. The 693 was around 2500 second hand. And recently purchased a nice 20 year old Miroku MK70 LH for around 350.
I just can't get my eye over the rib in any decent way on a RH or neutral gun. Obviously some people have no trouble.
 
#14 ·
I currently own 3 Browning target guns (2 XS Skeets and a Crossover Target) and all 3 are cast off. The XS Sporting I previously owned was also cast off.

Remove the forearm and hold the solid straightedge flat against one side of the receiver then do the same for the other side of the receiver. With all my guns it's nearly impossible to tell if just eyeballing it, but the cast becomes quite obvious when held against a straightedge.
 
#21 ·
My 2 Beretta doubles were Castoff, so required bending. Both were bought 20-25 yrs ago, so I don't have first hand knowledge if they still make most with CO. Both my Brownings are neutral stocks, both also from years back. This jives with what I've read and heard, from good sources such as this forum.
 
#24 ·
The B gun LH O/Us I've handled weren't very LH. I'd need them fitted. Unattractive vs an auto with shims. My shoulders don't like a heavy O/U for high volume anyhow.

If affordability is an issue, buy one top shelf and one adequate for backup. Do your best to wear the good one out. Most people can't. If you do then you're winning.

Despite popular misconception, the point of gun ownership is not to fill a gun safe, but to wear them out using them.