Being a “570”, will it be patterned after the 870, respectively? The Dagger was patterned after the G3 Glock. (Great move) And the SA version after the 1100 or 1187?
Would be way too awesome to see some part interchangeability.
I would love to be able to put those old hardwood stocks on a 570!
It is not a rumor, PSA directly confirmed that it is compatible with 870 furniture. As far as the internals, since the lockup will be in the action, free float hanger, & semi-auto convertible, it would make sense that very few, if any, original Remington or Mossberg internal parts will be interchangeable. That is, unless otherwise stated by PSA. The 570 doesn’t seem to be a “clone” but a completely new shotgun drawing design from two very popular, common, and reliable models.
I’m in the same boat. With me saving up for one for awhile, the door is opening for a Beretta 1301. I’m just plugging my ears and covering my eyes whenever I see one at regular price so I don’t get tempted.
yeah i saw that this afternoon and am soooo excited.. i cant wait to see the build options… thats gonna be a lot of fun.. i am gonna hold off on buying one complete though as i want to buidl mine..
A thought of mine is how this shotgun’s going to be treated in ban states, because it seems to really tread the line of what’s legal and what’s not. Most of those states are fine with pump actions, and you can sometimes get semis, but not with pistol grips, adjustable stocks, folding stocks, extended mag tubes, stuff like that. With this being fully modular and a receiver that can be built for either or…it may cause a few politicians and/or ATF agents a headache and I wonder if PSA’s legal department will even want to bother with it.
Funny thing is, most modern shotguns are mostly modular now anyway. Stocks, barrels, and magazine tubes are the only things separating “Grampa’s Dove Gun” from your uncle Ray’s Tactical Murder-Kill Army-Special-Forces Delta-Force-SEALs Military-Grade Shotgun…
(That last was Sardonically typed, in case anyone was wondering)
Not really that hard to mix-N-match parts, given even rudimentary mechanical ability.
Perfect example is the Remington 870. Police departments, sheriffs offices, and prisons across the whole country used them along with everyone else for decades. I’ve been able to get my hands on a couple from NC DOC when they were liquidating them and I got my eyes on some more from a neighboring county’s sheriffs office that’s about to do the same. The 870 (and Mossberg 500) are the two most common shotguns across the country and possibly the two most modular shotguns currently on the market.
I would worry about its ability to take a pistol grip. If a firearm is sold with it, that’s one thing. The capability of accepting other parts should not change any legality. I say “should not” but we all have seen where that is not always the case
Yeah for sure. In or around 1988 my first purchase was a 870 combo. Had the rifle sights 18 inch and 24 or such bird barrel. Harvested many a bird and deer with that single shotgun. Want to say the combo was about 190 or 200 bucks. About a weeks wages back then.