MTKTM Posted:
"Good write-up,310Pilot! It sounds as though you have the same two guns that I have, although I realize that some 8 3/8" guns come with the 'original' integral comp, and other more recent production with the interchangeable ones like on the 4" models. Reading your description I found myself wondering which one yours is?"
Thanks for the compliments. My 8 3/8" gun has the original integral compensator setup. When shooting a load in which I can actually feel the difference in recoil between the two (heavy loads are so powerful I can't really feel a difference, except in muzzle blast), the 4" with the interchangeable compensators definitely has a lot more recoil to it (disregarding muzzle blast, only what can be felt in the hand). In fact, with the loads I really like in the 4" gun (which still give a pretty good kick, definitely well above the level of a heavy loaded .44 Mag), the long barrel gun actually transmits so much less recoil that there is a dramatic difference in felt recoil between the two. Just basic physics, the heavier gun takes more oomph to displace. With that load, the 4" is actually more fun to shoot, as it is more of a challenge to shoot accurately with the noticeably heavier recoil.
While I am not a "recoil junkie," neither have I ever been terribly recoil sensitive. I carried a 6 1/2" Model 29 for quite some time as a primary weapon many years ago ('70s and '80s), and shot it for relatively extended range periods several times a week, always with "full house" 240 grain .44 Magnums. In fact, I never shot a .44 Special or a downloaded magnum in that gun. I got to the point that I could shoot it quite accurately double action at up to, and sometimes beyond, 100 yards. The recoil never bothered me, even when I'd run several hundred rounds down range in one session (of course, I was a lot younger then). I never really thought much about technique as to recoil control, I suppose I've always found it more natural to let the gun recoil, rather than try to fight it into staying in a fixed position. Sort of like being thrown from a horse - if you know you're going to leave, it's a whole lot better to relax and get off at a point of your own choosing, rather than hanging on tightly until the horse slams you off - the landing, in my experience, has always been a lot easier on me on those occasions when I relaxed, and always hurt more (and did more damage) if I hung on until there was no staying with the horse any more, and hit the ground all tensed up. Wasn't thrown very often, but learned that pretty quickly.
"Good write-up,310Pilot! It sounds as though you have the same two guns that I have, although I realize that some 8 3/8" guns come with the 'original' integral comp, and other more recent production with the interchangeable ones like on the 4" models. Reading your description I found myself wondering which one yours is?"
Thanks for the compliments. My 8 3/8" gun has the original integral compensator setup. When shooting a load in which I can actually feel the difference in recoil between the two (heavy loads are so powerful I can't really feel a difference, except in muzzle blast), the 4" with the interchangeable compensators definitely has a lot more recoil to it (disregarding muzzle blast, only what can be felt in the hand). In fact, with the loads I really like in the 4" gun (which still give a pretty good kick, definitely well above the level of a heavy loaded .44 Mag), the long barrel gun actually transmits so much less recoil that there is a dramatic difference in felt recoil between the two. Just basic physics, the heavier gun takes more oomph to displace. With that load, the 4" is actually more fun to shoot, as it is more of a challenge to shoot accurately with the noticeably heavier recoil.
While I am not a "recoil junkie," neither have I ever been terribly recoil sensitive. I carried a 6 1/2" Model 29 for quite some time as a primary weapon many years ago ('70s and '80s), and shot it for relatively extended range periods several times a week, always with "full house" 240 grain .44 Magnums. In fact, I never shot a .44 Special or a downloaded magnum in that gun. I got to the point that I could shoot it quite accurately double action at up to, and sometimes beyond, 100 yards. The recoil never bothered me, even when I'd run several hundred rounds down range in one session (of course, I was a lot younger then). I never really thought much about technique as to recoil control, I suppose I've always found it more natural to let the gun recoil, rather than try to fight it into staying in a fixed position. Sort of like being thrown from a horse - if you know you're going to leave, it's a whole lot better to relax and get off at a point of your own choosing, rather than hanging on tightly until the horse slams you off - the landing, in my experience, has always been a lot easier on me on those occasions when I relaxed, and always hurt more (and did more damage) if I hung on until there was no staying with the horse any more, and hit the ground all tensed up. Wasn't thrown very often, but learned that pretty quickly.