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The line on side ejection is utter nonsense. Every shotgun that isn't a break open sort is a side ejection model. Beyond that, the 1100 is a shotgun widely used in trap shooting. Beyond that, if it were a problem on the trap range, it would be an even greater problem when hunting. Having shot trap for over 30 years- almost all of it with an 1100, this is the first I've EVER heard that.
I've seen several bottom-ejects, mostly pumps, but the new CTi from Remington happens to bottom eject.
I've seen bolt action shotguns before.
A picture of a field version of the gun is desired. Goldfishsoldier 07:42, 15 July 2007 (UTC)
Since the article uses 2 pictures of the Tactical model, shouldn't we at least mention the tactical model in the article? And it's use? Niteshift36 ( talk) 05:11, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
The dates of introduction are listed for the various gauges do not match what Remington will tell a caller to their historical department.
I have in my possession an 1100 in 20 gauge that was confirmed by Remington as having been manufactured in 1968 as a part of a 4-gun set that included 12, 16, 20 and 28 gauge guns. According to the Remington historian I spoke with, all four gauges, plus .410, were available in 1963. They were, however, built on the 12ga. frame, rather than being built on gauge-specific frames. The gauge-specific frames were introduced in 1974 as "LWT" models. Kemkerj ( talk) 02:43, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
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The line on side ejection is utter nonsense. Every shotgun that isn't a break open sort is a side ejection model. Beyond that, the 1100 is a shotgun widely used in trap shooting. Beyond that, if it were a problem on the trap range, it would be an even greater problem when hunting. Having shot trap for over 30 years- almost all of it with an 1100, this is the first I've EVER heard that.
I've seen several bottom-ejects, mostly pumps, but the new CTi from Remington happens to bottom eject.
I've seen bolt action shotguns before.
A picture of a field version of the gun is desired. Goldfishsoldier 07:42, 15 July 2007 (UTC)
Since the article uses 2 pictures of the Tactical model, shouldn't we at least mention the tactical model in the article? And it's use? Niteshift36 ( talk) 05:11, 31 December 2007 (UTC)
The dates of introduction are listed for the various gauges do not match what Remington will tell a caller to their historical department.
I have in my possession an 1100 in 20 gauge that was confirmed by Remington as having been manufactured in 1968 as a part of a 4-gun set that included 12, 16, 20 and 28 gauge guns. According to the Remington historian I spoke with, all four gauges, plus .410, were available in 1963. They were, however, built on the 12ga. frame, rather than being built on gauge-specific frames. The gauge-specific frames were introduced in 1974 as "LWT" models. Kemkerj ( talk) 02:43, 2 May 2008 (UTC)