Gear

Three of the best second-hand clayshooting guns for beginners

Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers.  Find out more.
Time Well Spent
Time Well Spent December 14, 2017

 

second-hand clayshooting guns

Miroku MK70

  • Here’s a gun constructed on different principles to all of the break-action Berettas. Instead of having a relatively shallow action with the barrels hinged on stub pins, it’s based on the general layout of John Moses Browning’s immortal B25.
  • Miroku build today’s range of Browning B25 look-alikes.
  • This means that the gun has a relatively tall action, and the hinge takes the form of a low-mounted cross pin engaging with a hook on the forward end of the barrel lump. This gives the gun slightly different handling charactistics than those of the Berettas.
  • There are several grades available, and Michael could certainly afford a Grade 1 at around £1,000 or a little more. He might, if he is lucky, find a Grade 3 for £1,500, though they are rare and at that price he would have to pay particular attention to the gun’s condition. However, there are plenty of Grade 1 guns on the market, so it would just be a matter of finding the right one.
  • All this assumes that Michael thinks 
he needs a multichoke. He shouldn’t 
forget that Miroku are one of the very 
few manufacturers offering a fixed-choke 
in the form of the MK60. Except for the chokes, it is pretty much the same as the MK70 mechanically.

Related articles