Well, the god awful rattle of the forearm on an 835 probably cost us a longbeard today. I had called a bird in for an elderly gentleman, could hear him walking in the leaves on the back side of a small ridge toward us, was going to present himself at about 20 yards. As I directed the gentleman to move his barrel toward the walking bird, the 835's forearm rattled horribly. Just shy of the ridge crest, the bird immediately stopped and reversed course away from us. My friend knew what had happened and said that it wasn't the first time that it had happened to him due to the rattling forearm. My question is: does anyone have a suitable "fix" for an 835 that doesn't involve manually putting forward pressure on the forearm which is not an option for an older hunter w/ reduced arm strength and reach?
Not sure if it'll work but I'm gonna get some of those little felt sliders at wal mart that's sticky on one side and pressing them on the barrel between the forearm and barrel taking up some slack and hopefully deadening the clackin of the two. And hopefully not binding up the slide. Will be a cheap easy fix if they'll stay on. which they should if you clean the areas first with alcohol or denatured alcohol first. I'll follow up on it when i try it. Heck i might have some in there now!! Better try and round em up.
Best fix I found was to sell the berg and got a 870.
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I used some moleskin that I got to put on my bow. Cut four small squares and put one square on each side front and back of the inside of the slide on my 835. Works great.
Quote from: msgobblergetter on April 18, 2014, 10:37:58 PM
Best fix I found was to sell the berg and got a 870.
This is the only true fix for that dreaded rattle.
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Quote from: jim570 on April 18, 2014, 11:10:40 PM
I used some moleskin that I got to put on my bow. Cut four small squares and put one square on each side front and back of the inside of the slide on my 835. Works great.
Sir: that sounds like an awesome way to quiet the beast!!! :toothy9:
Quote from: msgobblergetter on April 18, 2014, 10:37:58 PM
Best fix I found was to sell the berg and got a 870.
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+1. Sounds like good advice.
good idea
But come deer season you have a way to call deer. By using cammo tape on both sides of the forearm inside it muffles sound somewhat. You can also put it along the barrel.
The nature of the beast so by wearing gloves and being careful when swinging the gun it helps the most.
You can use moleskin between the slide tube and magazine tube but you run the risk that if it peels up in there and starts to roll up or fold back it could jam the action. I always placed my hand just behind the forearm and pinched down on the slide rails when I had to swing on a close turkey. I have now moved to a 935 for turkey hunting. Same pattern, no rattle. But honesty in many many years of hunting with the 835 it never cost me a bird because of the rattle. It always performed flawlessly.
I remember the old mossberg 500's with that honey stained stock used to rattle. But my New 500 slug gun and my 835 are tight. Not sure what everyone else has?
The new 835 is very tight with little if any side to side play in it. By the time I've completed my evaluation, I'll have had a few seasons worth of shells through it, so we'll see it it changes over time with use. I'll make a that a part of my evaluation as well.
Thanks,
Clark
Buy a new one. Used only for turkeys and not racking it hard to load, you should get about a decade out of one before it gets loose.
So mossberg may have fixed this on the new guns? If so that would be great!
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Quote from: msgobblergetter on April 18, 2014, 10:37:58 PM
Best fix I found was to sell the berg and got a 870.
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The newer 835's don't rattle any more than an 870. I have both.
I have a new 835 and though its not real loose its just enough to make a noise if bumped the wrong way. I took those sliders from wal mart that are 2 5/8" long by 1/2" wide and cut it length wise with very sharp scissors. Cleaned both sides of the barrel with alcohol and placed a strip on each side of the barrel against the top of the slide with slight pressure. The felt is slick so no interferance with pumping and no side to side movement at all. One more thing i done i haven't heard many talk about is clear coating the gun to protect the finish and to slow down the fading of the camo. I Took it apart and hung each piece then wiped it all down with alcohol and let dry. Then put Three coats of the MATTE clearcoat finish on the whole thing minus red dot and choke which was taped off. Looks very good and actually makes the camo look sharper and brighter. I've carried it quite a bit and its doing good as well as no shine.
My 835 is the newer model. Bought it 2 years ago. It didn't rattle a lot, but the moleskin did make it quieter.