Home
Posted By: StudDuck Choke tube recommendation - 04/22/14
It has been years since I bought a tube and I honestly don't know what's out there.

I need a tube for a shotgun I'm purchasing this week; it's a Remington 870 12ga, with a 21" barrel, 3" chamber. I plan on using Remington Hevi-shot or Winchester XX with 4, 5, or 6 shot.

I really like the Indian Creek tubes in Remingtons...
Posted By: passport Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/22/14
I would recommend a tight one smile
Posted By: MOGC Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/22/14
Indian Creek, Kick's, Pure Gold or The Jellyhead should do really well for you.
Posted By: tzone Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/22/14
Originally Posted by StudDuck
It has been years since I bought a tube and I honestly don't know what's out there.

I need a tube for a shotgun I'm purchasing this week; it's a Remington 870 12ga, with a 21" barrel, 3" chamber. I plan on using Remington Hevi-shot or Winchester XX with 4, 5, or 6 shot.



Like I said to Rooster. The Jelly Head is tough to beat. I'm sure you can spend quite a bit more money and get an Indian Creek tube, but for $50 it's awfully hard to beat the Primos choke.
Posted By: JimHnSTL Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/22/14
i bought an Indian Creek tube for my Beretta last year so i could shoot hevi shot and my old stand by Comp-n-Choke do not reccomend hevishot through them. i have been very please with it and just this past Sun for grins i shot a Win turkey load 2 3/4" #4 shot through it and all i can say is wow!. in heavy shot i have 3" #6 or 5's can't recall at the moment.
Indian Creek makes very good chokes. If you purchase their BDS choke and are not satisfied with the results, IC will exchange the choke with a diff ED.

For a cheaper choke, I recommend the Primos Jelly Head .660 for your short barreled gun.

For an even cheaper choke that performs very well, search online for a Remington Ventilator .655 choke. They say lead only merely because they were made back when lead was the primary turkey load and they advised against shooting larger unbuffered steel shot through them. Buffered HTL turkey loads work quite well in the VL.

Good Luck

loder
Originally Posted by Reloader7RM
Indian Creek makes very good chokes. If you purchase their BDS choke and are not satisfied with the results, IC will exchange the choke with a diff ED.

For a cheaper choke, I recommend the Primos Jelly Head .660 for your short barreled gun.

For an even cheaper choke that performs very well, search online for a Remington Ventilator .655 choke. They say lead only merely because they were made back when lead was the primary turkey load and they advised against shooting larger unbuffered steel shot through them. Buffered HTL turkey loads work quite well in the VL.

Good Luck

loder


This
Posted By: Diyelker Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/23/14
You've got some good advice. My 870 has a 23" barrel with an Indian Creek .665. I shoot 3.5 hevi magblends. Its a stone cold killer. Shot one on Easter morning at 40 yards. He never even flinched after the shot. Just a whole lot of dead. That choke is somewhat pricey, but worth it IMO. Same with the shells. I only shoot 3-4 shells a year if I'm lucky tho. Ka boom

I'm sold on Indian Creek Tubes also. Amazing to say the least..
Posted By: davidlea Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/23/14
Originally Posted by gunnut308
I'm sold on Indian Creek Tubes also. Amazing to say the least..


Yep..
Posted By: StudDuck Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/24/14
Thanks all, I appreciate the advice.
Find you an old Remington Super Full Straight rifled tube. I have patterned a bunch of tubes over the last 15 years and this thing flat out performs way over the rest. They aren't made any more but if you do a little research you may find one out there. The tube I have has been shot in about 6 different guns from 21" to 28" barrels with #4 and #5 shot from the 3 main ammo companies and I have never seen a bad pattern from it. If I needed anything more than a standard full choke where I hunt that would be my go to tube.
Posted By: GSP814 Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/27/14
Primos JellyHead in .665!
Posted By: gitem_12 Re: Choke tube recommendation - 04/27/14
The bottom line is anyone here can give you their preference on tubes. They may or may not work. The hard truth is, inorder ti get the most from your turkey gun you are going to have to try a bunch of chokes and ammo combinations. Here is my method

Research tube reviews. If possible find reviews of the chokes you are interested that utilized the same model of gun you have. Old Gobbler turkey forum is a great source of information for this aspect.

Next, get a cabelas catalog or get on their webite and order the chokes you have natrowed the list down to from your research. Once you get the tubes get a supply of good, well reviewed Turkey loads( Researching Old Gobbler will give you a good idea of good performing loads), and head to the range with a 4x8 sheet of plywood, a couple rolls of butchers paper, a can of black spray paint, and a package of the turkey head tagets. Cover the plywood in paper(this makes it easier to see pattern density incase your poi is different from your poa on the target. Make a black mark approximately 3 inches around centered i. The firat half of the board. Do the same on the second half. Shoot one round of each turkey load you choes to try through the first choke tube you try. I between each shot draw a ten inch circle around the densest part of the pattern and count pellets notating results in a notebook. Do this with each load from each choke tube at 40 yards. When you find the densest one. Put up a turkey target and start adjusting your sights with that combination. Then simply return the rest of the chokes to Cabelas. Buy a supply of the chosen ammo and hunt
© 24hourcampfire