.410 shotgun

AR-15

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Jun 19, 2016
Posts
2,501
Likes
478
Points
338
Do any of you people hunt with or shoot clays with a 410? The grandson got a youth Mossberg pump 410 and I'am thinking of one for shooting some clay pigeons.
 


guywhofishes

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 21, 2015
Posts
30,179
Likes
8,772
Points
1,133
Location
Faaargo, ND
apparently the shot groups are crazy tight long strings

easy turkey killing but suck-city for birds on the wing unless you’re an ace shot
 

cooter00

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 16, 2015
Posts
1,371
Likes
337
Points
313
Location
Down by the river
I refuse to start a youngster on a 410 I got my daughter a 28 gauge it is light not much kick and way better at patterning. 410 can just be fustrating for a youth in my opinion I seen too many kids loose interest at the gun club because they just couldn't hit the clays talked a few into trying my 28 and they bit twice as many and don't loose interest ok rant over lol
 

AR-15

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Jun 19, 2016
Posts
2,501
Likes
478
Points
338
Maybe going to get a 410 double barrel, the Grandson is 7 yrs old and the 410 is big enough, he has a Remington youth 20ga new in a box since he was born, but that's to big for him now, never had a 28ga. maybe need to get one to try out.
 


Callem'In

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2015
Posts
674
Likes
70
Points
220
Location
Eastern ND
I have a 12 gauge Beretta with Brileys full length gauge reducers for sporting clays. I have shot quite a few pheasants with the .410. It can be done, but takes a lot of practice.
 

shorthairman

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Jul 27, 2018
Posts
737
Likes
80
Points
175
Location
North Central Nebraska
As long as he understands it’s going to be tough hitting targets the .410 is a good gun to start him on. Both my kids started with a .410 as did I. They are light and recoil is minimal, downside to that and the 28 is that you will drop about $10 a box. Adds up especially if you are shooting clays. Also bought my son an 870 youth in 20...kicked like a mule. They make them short and light and the recoil has the go somewhere.
 

Obi-Wan

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 15, 2015
Posts
10,043
Likes
7,683
Points
1,008
Location
Bismarck
Started my son out with a mossberg 510 super bantam 20 when he 9. The gun weighs just over 5 lbs and has an 18 1/2" barrel with overall length of 33 1/2" ( stock has removable extensions ) this gun is not much larger than a BB gun. A buddy started his son out with a 410 and the kid couldn't knock anything down and always wanted to sit in the truck until one day when I let him use my wife's youth 20 gauge and he dropped his first grouse after that he was hooked.
 

cooter00

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 16, 2015
Posts
1,371
Likes
337
Points
313
Location
Down by the river
I'm not saying .410 can't drop birds I'm saying it can be a very frustrating gun to begin with I have dropped Lott's of birds with a .410 but I didn't use one until I was a seasoned shooter I started with a 20g single shot my dad wouldn't give me a repeater until I could make the first one count then he bought me a 16gauge bolt action I am grateful he was tough on me cause now days I don't find many people that can out shoot me I started my daughter on the 28g pump but only let her put one shell in it at a time until she gets good I believe this helps become a better more responsible shooter
 

gone_fishing

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 15, 2015
Posts
698
Likes
6
Points
168
Location
North Dakota
What sucks about .410 is the price of the shells. Cheapest I saw at Walmart was around $13 a box for 8 shot target loads. Not a huge deal if you don't shoot much (or re-load) but still quite a bit more then 12 or 20 gauge.
 


5575

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
3,992
Likes
1,719
Points
673
On pheasant opener at our place it's .410 only, always a fun time. :;:thumbsup

IMG_7705.jpg
 
Last edited:

AR-15

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Jun 19, 2016
Posts
2,501
Likes
478
Points
338
5575, that sounds like fun, gone_fishing, haven't reloaded any 410 shells yet, waiting to get more empties then will reload some, bet it won't cost much to reload them
 

Bfishn

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Dec 7, 2015
Posts
3,934
Likes
401
Points
368
I got my first rooster out of the air with a .410 when i was about 10 or so. When you learn with a .410, you'll be a crack shot with a 12 later in life.
 

Mort

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Posts
2,977
Likes
68
Points
313
Location
NW ND somewhere
My first gun I bought at the age of 10 I believe, was a single shot .410 with my hard earning allowance money. I don't' remember the brand, and at that age, I didn't give a flying woody, just happy I got a gun. For you minot people, maybe you can help me out of the name of the store. It was in the Arrowhead mall, and I think it was a hardware store and not a sports store because those stores were unheard of back in the 70's. Dad came come and was kinda mad because my mom took me down there and did all the paper work, so he went down there and bought my sister a .410 and my brother a 20 ga = all single shot. Then the folks got in an argument because mom thought that wasn't right that he went and bought the other two guns, but I had to buy my own.
 

huntinforfish

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 11, 2015
Posts
679
Likes
14
Points
143
I grew up with a kid who only shot a .410 as that is all they had and he could keep pace with any one of us shooting trap. Are there no additional chokes for .410 barrels?
 


guywhofishes

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 21, 2015
Posts
30,179
Likes
8,772
Points
1,133
Location
Faaargo, ND
I grew up with a kid who only shot a .410 as that is all they had and he could keep pace with any one of us shooting trap. Are there no additional chokes for .410 barrels?

there are simply so few pellets that if you did spread them out the same as a modified 12/20 pattern the pellet count (density) would be so low you'd miss a lot even with perfect aim
 

fly2cast

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 14, 2015
Posts
1,021
Likes
24
Points
226
If you're buying a .410 for yourself and have other guns to hunt with, sounds like fun. But if it's your only shotgun, I wouldn't mess with it.

If anybody is planning on buying their kid a shotgun, I think I would go with a 12 gauge right off the bat. I bought my oldest son a 20 gauge semi-auto when he was 12. It was real light and I thought since he was young he should have a lighter gun. He did OK with it. My other son turned 11 this year and he jumped right in with a heavy 12 gauge pump. He did excellent with it. What I'm trying to say is that many kids can handle a full size 12 gauge. 8 years old might be too young for a full size shotgun but I think many 10, 11, and 12 year olds can handle them. The good think about a heavier gun is that they kick less.
 

Duckslayer100

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2015
Posts
4,631
Likes
218
Points
328
Location
ND's Flatter Half
I started with a .410. Want to sap a new hunter's budding excitement and confidence? Give them one of those guns and tell them to go kill birds. It's like trying to scoop minnows with a landing net. I'd have been better off with a .22 sniping birds out of treetops than trying to hit them on the wing with a .410.

I hunted one season with a .410 and dad quickly realized it wasn't going to pan out. Bought me a youth model 870 pump 20 gauge and it was worlds different. I still use that gun to this day. Great bush gun for trail chickens. If you know how to crack a whip, then hip-firing a snubby 20 gauge at a flushing grouse through pencil-thin poplars and aspins comes close. Talk about threading a needle! But golly is it fun.
 

AR-15

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Thread starter
Joined
Jun 19, 2016
Posts
2,501
Likes
478
Points
338
2 of my friends had 410's when they were kids and they did just fine with them, 5575, it looks like you guy's shoot a nice variety guns
 


Recent Posts

Friends of NDA

Top Posters of the Month

  • This month: 110
  • This month: 39
  • This month: 35
  • This month: 30
  • This month: 21
  • This month: 21
  • This month: 19
  • This month: 19
  • This month: 16
  • This month: 15
Top Bottom