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Gun Review : Centurion Survivor .410

Travis Pike - comments 19 comments
$99 Folding .410 Shotgun Review: Does It Actually Work?

With gas prices and the economy being the way they are, I find myself sorting from lowest to highest a lot more often. In doing so, I recently discovered the Century Arms Centurion Survivor. As a fan of alliteration, the gun name caught my attention; as a fan of low prices, that did too. In fact, I can keep listing things I am a fan of that made this gun appeal to me:

  • It is a shotgun
  • It is a survival gun
  • It is ugly
  • It is weird
  • It folds
A micro-sized .410? Sure, why not!

Those are all things I am a fan of. I have never claimed to have good taste in guns. The Centurion Survivor is a folding .410 shotgun, which I purchased for $99.99. If you are a fan of the Chiappa Badger series, this gun looks identical to the Chiappa Big Badger. The Badger series is Turkish-made, and so is the Centurion Survivor.

Design and Features

This single-shot, folding .410 is not exactly identical to the Big Badger. Chiappa adds a cheek rest, a more robust recoil pad, and M-LOK slots along the handguard. The Centurion Survivor lacks these extras. It does, however, come with Picatinny rails at the top and bottom of the micro-sized handguard and a three-shell holder inside the stock.

Three extra shells is a nice touch, but it doesn’t beat a pocketful of .410

Simplicity is the key to the gun design. It lacks any form of manual safety; users will rely on the half cock position of the hammer. The controls are a trigger and a breakdown lever. That is it.

You gotta put rails on everything these days.

Up front, we have a red high-visibility sight that tops off the 18-inch barrel. The Big Badger lists a 20-inch barrel, so the Survivor gives us a slightly shorter firearm. The gun’s overall length is 35.8 inches opened and 21.3 inches folded. It weighs a mere 3.3 pounds. We get a cylinder bore choke, and the gun can chamber up to a 3-inch shotgun shell.

Cheap and Useful

Obviously, the idea behind the aptly named Survivor is to provide a minimalist survival shotgun that can be thrown into your camping gear, your boat, your ATV, or whatever, and serve as a simple yet effective firearm for all manner of purposes.

If you are stuck in a Bear Grylls situation, now you have a gun that can kill deer, rabbits, birds, squirrels, and maybe something even bigger with the right load. For most of us, this can be an effective working gun. A gun you can keep in the truck to peg coyotes and hogs to do your rural neighborly duty.

This is an easy store it and forget it gun

The Survivor is cheap enough that when you beat it to pieces, you will not be so heartbroken. As a .410, you can shove a lot of different things down the barrel, including barrel inserts to convert the caliber. I am a fan of the Chaszel rifled adapters, which produce a variety of options including 9mm, .22LR, .380 ACP, .32 S&W Long, and .38 Special.

In the folded configuration the Survivor is ulta compact

I have a rifled model for the .32 S&W Long I use in .410s. It keeps recoil light and gives me superb accuracy. It is perfect for small to moderate-sized game; with good shot placement, you could easily take down a coyote.

At the Range With the Survivor

The first thing I did was load a 3-inch .410 000 buckshot Remington round, sending five big pellets. The second thing I did was regret it. Okay, I am being a little facetious, but hot damn, this thing’s recoil surprised me. I am used to .410s having light, dandy recoil; this thing packs a bit more sting, landing somewhere near 20 gauge territory.

It packs a whallop for a .410

The hard recoil pad and lightweight design do not do you any favors. The pattern was not exactly impressive either. At 15 yards, the pattern was a vertical string from the top to the bottom of an 8-inch circle. Winchester 2.5-inch buckshot patterned much better, with the pellets being about 4 inches wide in a vertical string.

Loading from the stock is easy, if the stock holds the shells

The birdshot patterns were fine for the gun’s purpose. At 15 yards, it was 10 inches wide with 7.5 shot. For close-range small game, it will work. It is certainly not a hit them in the head turkey gun, but I can kill a tree rat with that type of pattern.

Performance Notes: Hot, Hot, Hot

The trigger is quite short and rather nice. Surprisingly so for a Turkish shotgun. Every time the hammer dropped, the gun fired. The system has an extractor but lacks an ejector; the folding action pushes the round out easily, making it simple to remove and reload.

As you can imagine, the dinky handguard gets hot quickly. It is not a gun meant for extended firing sessions. The handguard gets hot after about 10 rounds; after 20, I wanted to put it down and let it cool.

This thing gets spicey after a few rounds

The shell holder is a great idea in theory, but it would consistently drop a round when fired. It is hardly secure. Luckily, shotgun shells mostly come in bright colors, so it would be easy to find them in the wild.

Specifications

  • Barrel Length: 18 inches
  • Overall Length: 35.8 inches
  • Folded Length: 21.3 inches
  • Weight: 3.3 pounds
  • Chambering: .410 (2.5 and 3-inch)
  • MSRP: $139.99 (Street: $99)

Accuracy: ***

No POI/POA issues, but it can throw some wide buckshot patterns. Make sure to pattern your defensive loads.

Ergonomics: **

The controls are easy to reach, but the wire stock and dinky handguard are doing you zero favors in the comfort department.

Reliability: *****

I fired 150 rounds of mixed .410 without a single failure to fire or any difficulty extracting spent cartridges.

Overall ***

For $99, this thing is exactly what it should be: a weird little folding shotgun that just works. Toss it in the truck, forget about it, and know it’ll be there when you need it.

19 thoughts on “Gun Review : Centurion Survivor .410”

  1. I am 1000% going to buy one of these when I find one. In fact I will probably buy two of them, or maybe even three of them. Why? Because they are perfect for their intended role.

    Reply
    • I would probably buy two or three of these (if chambered in .357 Magnum) in addition to buying two or three of them in .410 shotgun.

      Reply
      • At that barrel length and price the only concern would be build quality. Turks have done well enough on lower pressure systems but 357 magnum especially anything intended for a rifle loading may challenge the metallurgy.

        Reply
      • 410 slug ballistics can rival those of a 41 magnum.

        Was I to get one, and I just may, I’d look into throwing a length of pipe insulation on it if I found heat to be a hindrance. Also would cushion it some from all the junk in the back of the F150…

        Reply
    • You can shoot 45colt out of a 410. I shoot 44mag out of mine too , it’s an open choke 19 inch barrel H&R.

      Reply
      • “You can shoot 45colt out of a 410.” Sure you can, if you don’t value your life, your limbs, your fingers, your eyes. Shooting a .452″ bullet out of a .410″ bore is just asking for a big “kaboom!”

        “I shoot 44mag out of mine too.”
        Ok, now I know you’re just trolling us.
        You can only shoot a high-pressure .44 Magnum 0.429″ bullet out of a low-pressure 0.410″ shotgun once.
        Once!
        After that one shot, doctors will be picking pieces of the gun’s action out of your face in the hospital, or you’ll be in the morgue.

        Reply
  2. Very informative review! Is there a method of indexing those rifled inserts so they always shoot to point of aim?

    The stock is a weird choice. A wire stock is a reasonable compromise for a side-folder, where every fraction of an inch makes for a fatter folded thickness. With this, a larger / cushioned tube would feel a lot better and not make the gun bigger in any way.

    Reply
    • Someone adept at sewing could probably rig up something with elastic shell loops to fill in the open space in the wire frame. Perhaps not 20 rounds, but certainly more than 3.

      Reply

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