.455_Hunter
Member
No recessed chambers?
No recessed chambers?
No recessed chambers?
That gun is very interesting and looks really fun to shoot!
I would take some pretty close up and detailed pictures of your firing pin just in case it breaks down the road.
I love out of the ordinary stuff and that gun certainly pushes my buttons.![]()
I've seen a few large frame top breaks converted to .22, and of course there are the Cogswell & Harrison WW2 Victories converted to .22 after WW2. I've never seen an N frame conversion. I like it!
There was supposedly exactly ONE Registered Magnum produced on special order in .22LR. It's never turned up.
The .455 did not have recessed chambers either, nor did the 44 Special, so all those gorgeous early N frames lacked recessed chambers.. so NO the poor little .22 didn't get them either??
The only sad part for a real triple lock, LOL.. I always chuckle when 44 Special/.455 owners list their guns as being "pinned and recessed", pinned but NOT recessed??
You do know why recessed .22 revolver chambers are a good idea, don't you?
I get what you are saying. That being said, these cylinders have a gap between the rear face and the recoil shield. How could a conversion of such a cylinder accommodate recessed chambers?
The .22 long rifle Registered Magnum came up in another thread.
Roy Jinks says, registration number 1591, serial 49736, 8-3/8 inch barrel, blue, King Ramp reflector with red post front and King 112 rear sight. Shipped November 21, 1936 to the American Potash & Chemical Corp., Trona, California. Cost was $150.00. It was a matched set with registration number 1590, serial 49710 in .357 Magnum. Cost $60.00.
I want one, don't imagine they grow on trees. OP-mind telling us where/how you found it? Great gun.