If you don’t mind me asking, do you recall roughly what you paid for it?No, true to caliber, joy to shoot, lightweight and pointy
My .410 AYA No4 which is an ejector I got as part of a trade in £4500 bank transfer plus the No4) when I sold my Boss some couple of years back. I think the shop had the AYA listed at £1400? A AYA No4 in 28 bore will be similarly expensive. A No3 which is a non-ejector will be maybe £300 to £400 less at around £700 to £800 I'd think. Other maker's .410" and 28 bore guns such as the excellent Ugartachea will be around the £700 mark if an ejector. The heavy for calibre other Spanish lesser known .410" guns I can't in truth see the point of if they weigh 6lbs 4ozs.If you don’t mind me asking, do you recall roughly what you paid for it?
More to the point is what they retail for secondhand now, irrelevant what I paid for it, they go for normally upwards of £1800-2k but you’ll do well to find one truth be told, I don’t doubt t if I was prepared to wait an offer over 2k wouldn’t be out of the question.If you don’t mind me asking, do you recall roughly what you paid for it?
My .410 AYA No4 which is an ejector I got as part of a trade in £4500 bank transfer plus the No4) when I sold my Boss some couple of years back. I think the shop had the AYA listed at £1400? A AYA No4 in 28 bore will be similarly expensive. A No3 which is a non-ejector will be maybe £300 to £400 less at around £700 to £800 I'd think. Other maker's .410" and 28 bore guns such as the excellent Ugartachea will be around the £700 mark if an ejector. The heavy for calibre other Spanish lesser known .410" guns I can't in truth see the point of if they weigh 6lbs 4ozs.
My 28 weighs 5lb 10oz (27 inch barrels) my 12 bore of the same model is 7lbDo you happen to know the weight of both the AYA no4 410 and 28?
Thank you for the excellent info!
My own .410 No4 has had the stock extended so it isn't a useful figure I'd give you. However Holt's does weigh the guns that it sells and both .410" and 28 bore will be in their "Smallbore Guns" listings. There will be inevitably a slight variation gun to gun as some walnut will weigh less or more than other walnut. But a look back on past Holt's using a search engine with suitable word choice should help you. Try "Holt's AYA 28 bore" and "Holt's AYA .410""Do you happen to know the weight of both the AYA no4 410 and 28?
Thank you for the excellent info!
Hope this helps?
HOLTS Auctioneers
HOLTS are Europe's leading Auctioneers of Fine Modern & Antique Guns.www.holtsauctioneers.com
HOLTS Auctioneers
HOLTS are Europe's leading Auctioneers of Fine Modern & Antique Guns.www.holtsauctioneers.com
HOLTS Auctioneers
HOLTS are Europe's leading Auctioneers of Fine Modern & Antique Guns.www.holtsauctioneers.com
HOLTS Auctioneers
HOLTS are Europe's leading Auctioneers of Fine Modern & Antique Guns.www.holtsauctioneers.com
be warned those prices will generally be well exceeded I was was eyeing up a non ejector aya 410 at a previous sale, estimate was 3-400, went for 900 if my memory is correct. But you never know! Small bores are always popularYou are a gentleman
It would appear holts is the place to go for price / and even finding one… I will have to check what their fees are on top of hammer price.
28 is much more usable, 410 can be a little soul destroying if you’re not on the mark. I still hanker after a 410 but would only ever use it for play, and maybe squirrels, the 28 is used as a game gun though.Both the 410 and 28 bore very similar in weight … now to decide which to get!
There's a lot of commonsense in that. Choosing a properly made scaled action 20 bore. Especially with regard to future availability of non-lead cartridges. Back in a previous thread I said that there was so little weight difference in the gun between a 20 bore and a 28 bore that the better choice was between 20 and .410.Not a 28 or a .410, but I bought an AYA No.4 20 bore for £1800 last year. It's a 2009 gun, steel proofed and in very good condition having been hardly used. It does show the premium prices for small bores compared to 12 bore versions. It was originally advertised at £2,800 IIRC.
Not a 28 or a .410, but I bought an AYA No.4 20 bore for £1800 last year. It's a 2009 gun, steel proofed and in very good condition having been hardly used. It does show the premium prices for small bores compared to 12 bore versions. It was originally advertised at £2,800 IIRC.
Biggest difference - clays start off fast and slow down and fall. Birds start slow and get faster and higher, and move in all sorts of different directions. A faster handling instinctive shooting side by side is a joy to use on exploding birds like snipe, grouse, teal etc etc.I find that weight is immaterial, it’s all about feel. If it feels right it should shoot right.
Those who shoot clays a lot tend to prefer long weighty barrels as that’s what the discipline has developed to tackle long distance targets.
Driven or walked up birds tend to need less gun if you know what I mean.