A friend of mine recently purchased a RIA 12 gauge semi-auto shotgun (yeah yeah, I know RIA is cheap, but it was the best he could get his hands on). The manufacturer stated that you need to run “2-3/4”, 1250fps, #7.5 1-1/8oz” rounds for a break-in period. Makes sense. Where we are confused is their definition of “light load” vs “heavy load”. The shotgun comes with interchangeable pistons, one for light load and one for heavy load. My friend emailed the manufacturer, who said that the light load configuration was for 2-3/4” rounds and heavy load configuration was for 3” rounds (and yes, the shotgun can handle both sizes). That didn’t make sense to us. The reading I had done said you can have both light and heavy loads for both size rounds, that the load size is determined by shot size.
Can anyone provide some clarification? My friend and I are new to shotguns, apologies for the ignorance.
I have a RIA, and as far as I can tell, the “heavy” and “light” is rather subjective.
Here’s a link from a shotgun forum
If you’re running light (7-9) birdshot, “low recoil”, or shorties switch out—it will either cycle or not. I run heavy loads for defense, so I haven’t used the light piston. I’ve run few hundred through my RIA, and I’ve never had a round not cycle. I do plan on trying some birdshot, since ammo is so crazy expensive right now.
So, shell size (2-3/4” vs 3”) doesn’t determine what is a light or heavy load.