DapperDan
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2012
- Messages
- 1,461
Just curious if anyone has one of these particular guns and are willing to share some thoughts. I think this may be the next gun on my list.
I stopped by a gun store today and fondled quite a few shotguns ranging from the beretta silver pigeon to the EELL, to Rizzini, to Blaser.
The two guns that shoulder the best to me where I felt immediately on target was the Cesar Magnus and the Blaser F3. Both fine guns and well balanced.
Pros and cons I’ve found:
Pros - The Cesar is a beautiful gun, shoulders very well, not too heavy at under 7 pounds, great finish and trigger, quality wood, and price isn’t terrible. From what I’ve read the customer service is great. It comes with a lifetime warranty with 3 free “pit stops” where the gun can be sent in and gone through with a deep clean and inspection.
The Blaser is almost perfectly balanced to me, locks on target and swings incredible well. Feels to be a robust gun that can surely take some abuse. Trigger quality is fine as well. It would serve well if trap or skeet is also part of the shooting plan. The barrel selector is in front of the trigger which makes swapping barrels while on target extremely fast.
Cons- the Cesar comes with engraved false side plates. Not sure if this is or can be an issue down the road seeing as I read somewhere that it can increase odds of stock cracking. It also seems that if you read long enough you find people that say the locking feature on the Cesar is inferior.
The Blaser is a little heavier than the Magnus with a longer barrel at 4” more than the Cesar. The fit and finish on the F3 are very plain unless you spend more to get any engraving. At that price point I can buy 2 Ceasars. lol
I did like the look and feel of one of the Rizzinis and the EELL I held but it didn’t shoulder quite like the Magnus although the balance and weight were nice.
Am I missing anything? Over thinking anything? My plan would be occasional skeet and upland game. So honestly, I’m thinking more of a field gun vs a sporting gun.
My next options would be 20 or 28 gauge. Leaning more towards 20 gauge since I’m not the worlds best shot and cripples are never fun for anyone other than the dog. lol. I still don’t know how I’d feel about a 28 gauge on pheasants.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I stopped by a gun store today and fondled quite a few shotguns ranging from the beretta silver pigeon to the EELL, to Rizzini, to Blaser.
The two guns that shoulder the best to me where I felt immediately on target was the Cesar Magnus and the Blaser F3. Both fine guns and well balanced.
Pros and cons I’ve found:
Pros - The Cesar is a beautiful gun, shoulders very well, not too heavy at under 7 pounds, great finish and trigger, quality wood, and price isn’t terrible. From what I’ve read the customer service is great. It comes with a lifetime warranty with 3 free “pit stops” where the gun can be sent in and gone through with a deep clean and inspection.
The Blaser is almost perfectly balanced to me, locks on target and swings incredible well. Feels to be a robust gun that can surely take some abuse. Trigger quality is fine as well. It would serve well if trap or skeet is also part of the shooting plan. The barrel selector is in front of the trigger which makes swapping barrels while on target extremely fast.
Cons- the Cesar comes with engraved false side plates. Not sure if this is or can be an issue down the road seeing as I read somewhere that it can increase odds of stock cracking. It also seems that if you read long enough you find people that say the locking feature on the Cesar is inferior.
The Blaser is a little heavier than the Magnus with a longer barrel at 4” more than the Cesar. The fit and finish on the F3 are very plain unless you spend more to get any engraving. At that price point I can buy 2 Ceasars. lol
I did like the look and feel of one of the Rizzinis and the EELL I held but it didn’t shoulder quite like the Magnus although the balance and weight were nice.
Am I missing anything? Over thinking anything? My plan would be occasional skeet and upland game. So honestly, I’m thinking more of a field gun vs a sporting gun.
My next options would be 20 or 28 gauge. Leaning more towards 20 gauge since I’m not the worlds best shot and cripples are never fun for anyone other than the dog. lol. I still don’t know how I’d feel about a 28 gauge on pheasants.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk