I had a sporting clays gun that I used for skeet with Briley ultra light tubes and a custom stock. Shot it well for several years. Never cared for it in 12 ga. as it seemed to have more recoil than expected. I have owned the 12 and 20 sporting clays guns as well as the odd 20 and several 28 ga guns. Of the group I like the 28 best. The 28 is best balanced of the group and deadly on quail and early season doves.

You know the gun was designed to be a 20 ga. field gun not a clays gun. Original concept was a 20 gun to fill the nich a lot like the RBL tried to fill. It just morphed into field, clay target and any other type gun over time. Not doing anything perfectly well but seeming to do a decent job of everything at the same time. A lot like a Remington 1100. Solid and basic but not a premium do everything gun.

Some people do have trouble with the ejectors and it can fail to cock if you do not open it fully. Tubes sets make the barrels so heavy they always cock but without tubes you need to make the barrels open fully to ensure cocking. If you reload you must resize well to keep the ejectors functioning well. Never bothered to figure out if it had tight chambers or weak ejectors. Just feed it good ammo and it works well.