Offered for your perusal is a Hand Ejector Second Model .44 Target - well sort of.
A few years ago, I acquired a pre-war .38 Special Outdoorsman. It had a bad barrel and went into the safe to worry about later. Eventually the inspiration hit to make a Second Model .44 Special Target out of it. I knew that very few exist, and it sounded like a fun gun to have. Also I had several Second Model barrels, which helped the decision. It was a "if you can't find a real one; make one" situation.
The work was done by Keegan Singleton at Competitive Shooting Solutions in Alabama. The frame and cylinder, and the barrel were all somewhere between 85 and 90% original finish. We talked about it a lot and decided the right thing was the appearance of a nearly 90 year old revolver that had been used but well cared for, rather than a new one, so it was not re-blued.
Not having a rib or underlug, it is surprisingly light for its size. It has had one range trip and seemed to really like 200 grain cast bullets with Unique. More experimentation is coming. It's fun to shoot.
Timing is spot on and there is no end shake. The grips are by John Culina.
Note: Nothing of collector quality nor anything famous was used in making it.
A few years ago, I acquired a pre-war .38 Special Outdoorsman. It had a bad barrel and went into the safe to worry about later. Eventually the inspiration hit to make a Second Model .44 Special Target out of it. I knew that very few exist, and it sounded like a fun gun to have. Also I had several Second Model barrels, which helped the decision. It was a "if you can't find a real one; make one" situation.
The work was done by Keegan Singleton at Competitive Shooting Solutions in Alabama. The frame and cylinder, and the barrel were all somewhere between 85 and 90% original finish. We talked about it a lot and decided the right thing was the appearance of a nearly 90 year old revolver that had been used but well cared for, rather than a new one, so it was not re-blued.
Not having a rib or underlug, it is surprisingly light for its size. It has had one range trip and seemed to really like 200 grain cast bullets with Unique. More experimentation is coming. It's fun to shoot.
Timing is spot on and there is no end shake. The grips are by John Culina.
Note: Nothing of collector quality nor anything famous was used in making it.

