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Buy Todd Benders video "Winning with the Fundamentals in Skeet" (or something like that) and watch it 5 times. This will tell you how to select a gun that fits you without having an expert gun fitter. It will also give you the fundamentals on safety, ammo, proper stance mechanics, proper sight picture, head on gun, eye on target, and proper lead. It goes through a whole skeet round and lets you see what the gun picture looks like with an eye cam in fast and slow motion. Well worth the bucks as it will save you from buying the wrong gun and wasting a ton of ammo/clays.
Most any 12 gauge with interchangeable choke tubes will work (except possibly a side by side). A Mossberg 500 will do fine as long as it fits you and you get the proper sight picture, although you may be handicapped with doubles using a pump (too slow--skeet is a very fast game). I prefer Benelli legacy or legacy sport autos but generally do a bit better with an over under (Browning Citori) than with an auto.
Pick one kind of ammo (1/18 oz shot, 8 shot, highest velocity you can find) and buy a lot of it. Changing ammo will mess you up.
Lots of practice goes a long ways, as with any other shooting sport.
Most any 12 gauge with interchangeable choke tubes will work (except possibly a side by side). A Mossberg 500 will do fine as long as it fits you and you get the proper sight picture, although you may be handicapped with doubles using a pump (too slow--skeet is a very fast game). I prefer Benelli legacy or legacy sport autos but generally do a bit better with an over under (Browning Citori) than with an auto.
Pick one kind of ammo (1/18 oz shot, 8 shot, highest velocity you can find) and buy a lot of it. Changing ammo will mess you up.
Lots of practice goes a long ways, as with any other shooting sport.