I own the SBEIII. I have also shot the A400 and the A391. Here are my thoughts based on my first hand experience, but bear in mind that it really is the Ford/Chevy thing.
- The SBE III in IMO is ergonomically better than the Beretta. The forend of the Beretta is blocky and thick. It puts me in mind of the Glock in the sense that its like holding a 2x2 piece of lumber. The SBE III forend is the opposite and is damn sexy to hold. The balance is much better on the SBE III as the Beretta feels much heavier in the stock end.
- I also never really liked the Beretta safety being in front of the trigger guard but that is a minor thing that you could surely overcome in the course of one morning.
- SBE III recoil is noticeably more but the SBE III recoil is mild to begin with.
- Both easy to break down and clean although the SBE III is ever so slightly easier.
- In my experience, with anything less than negligent maintenance, both will go boom with everything from fancy roman candle 3.5s to Wal-Mart dove loads. My bro-in-law has a A391 from the early 2000s that he only cleans after duck season and it is going strong. I am a bit of a nerd about clean guns so I clean mine at least weekly during the season. I think reliability is equal.
- HOWEVER, my SBE III (purchased in January 2018) shoots high. I've attached a pic of the pattern at 25 paces with the factory full choke and hevi-shot 3" 1 5/8 #4. Aimed at the wattles. Naturally, I didn't pattern it before opening morning and I missed right before this pic was taken. Benelli says the spec is 60/40 POA but that has not been my experience.
After that pattern test, I did not get to pattern it again due to some silly people feeling strongly that work/family/life is more important than turkey hunting. Prior to dove season, I shimmed it with the factory shim (the "D" 65mm, I believe) and have not had a problem hitting birds on the wing once I was aware of keeping the whole bird visible. With turkey season coming up, I will pattern again and follow up here if I can remember. But don't do what I did and have a gobbler at 25 paces with no idea of how the pattern looks.
Having said all of this, I have chosen to keep the SBE III because of the way it handles and because, once shimmed, I had no more problems with misses (other than operator error) on ducks and doves, my main quarry and I've put a case of dove load and two cases of duck load through it since then. I haven't made up my mind about using it for turkeys since I have other options.
Of course, your mileage may vary.
- The SBE III in IMO is ergonomically better than the Beretta. The forend of the Beretta is blocky and thick. It puts me in mind of the Glock in the sense that its like holding a 2x2 piece of lumber. The SBE III forend is the opposite and is damn sexy to hold. The balance is much better on the SBE III as the Beretta feels much heavier in the stock end.
- I also never really liked the Beretta safety being in front of the trigger guard but that is a minor thing that you could surely overcome in the course of one morning.
- SBE III recoil is noticeably more but the SBE III recoil is mild to begin with.
- Both easy to break down and clean although the SBE III is ever so slightly easier.
- In my experience, with anything less than negligent maintenance, both will go boom with everything from fancy roman candle 3.5s to Wal-Mart dove loads. My bro-in-law has a A391 from the early 2000s that he only cleans after duck season and it is going strong. I am a bit of a nerd about clean guns so I clean mine at least weekly during the season. I think reliability is equal.
- HOWEVER, my SBE III (purchased in January 2018) shoots high. I've attached a pic of the pattern at 25 paces with the factory full choke and hevi-shot 3" 1 5/8 #4. Aimed at the wattles. Naturally, I didn't pattern it before opening morning and I missed right before this pic was taken. Benelli says the spec is 60/40 POA but that has not been my experience.
After that pattern test, I did not get to pattern it again due to some silly people feeling strongly that work/family/life is more important than turkey hunting. Prior to dove season, I shimmed it with the factory shim (the "D" 65mm, I believe) and have not had a problem hitting birds on the wing once I was aware of keeping the whole bird visible. With turkey season coming up, I will pattern again and follow up here if I can remember. But don't do what I did and have a gobbler at 25 paces with no idea of how the pattern looks.
Having said all of this, I have chosen to keep the SBE III because of the way it handles and because, once shimmed, I had no more problems with misses (other than operator error) on ducks and doves, my main quarry and I've put a case of dove load and two cases of duck load through it since then. I haven't made up my mind about using it for turkeys since I have other options.
Of course, your mileage may vary.