SGT ROCK 11B
Member
FYI, everybody may not want to carry. JMHO… and buy a small frame snub revolver for carry.
FYI, everybody may not want to carry. JMHO… and buy a small frame snub revolver for carry.
In the first posting, OP said "...primary use home defense possibly carry..."FYI, everybody may not want to carry. JMHO
Your friend is referring to shavings from a poorly timed gun. If not properly aligned with the forcing cone it will shave metal off and possibly spit it back in your face. While no brand is immune to this (my brother had a Smith with this issue but it was fixed) you are far more likely to have this problem with brands that do less QC. I had a Taurus, it worked fine, but the timing and quality on it were significantly inferior to my first Smith.Hey Guys, had a conversation with a co-worker yesterday and mentioned I am looking into revolvers. He said "Bravo" about time. His forte is 44 mag. revolvers, loves them. He did say great revolvers but not for me starting out. Since he knows the majority I shoot is 9mm. He did mention Charter Arms and also Taurus tracker. Any thoughts...
Lastly he told me to watch out for shavings, he explained the timing issue. I had no idea.
Each and every chamber in the cylinder must line up with the barrel. If there is a timing problem, one or more chambers may be misaligned with the barrel. This will cause a sliver of bullet jacket or lead to fly off to the left or right when shooting, and could injure you or a bystander.Hey Guys, had a conversation with a co-worker yesterday and mentioned I am looking into revolvers. He said "Bravo" about time. His forte is 44 mag. revolvers, loves them. He did say great revolvers but not for me starting out. Since he knows the majority I shoot is 9mm. He did mention Charter Arms and also Taurus tracker. Any thoughts...
Lastly he told me to watch out for shavings, he explained the timing issue. I had no idea.
So it excels at nothing and sucks for what it would be primary used for by most that carry it who don't live in or frequent bear country. Even those who do, .38/.357 would still not be optimal. Buy a revolver that best fits the role for carry. Then buy another that best works for bears, hunting, target shooting, etc.
Each and every chamber in the cylinder must line up with the barrel. If there is a timing problem, one or more chambers may be misaligned with the barrel. This will cause a sliver of bullet jacket or lead to fly off to the left or right when shooting, and could injure you or a bystander.
Regardless of whether a revolver's timing is off or if it's perfect, you will also get flames and hot gases coming out of the barrel/cylinder gap. So you should not use the thumbs forward grip when shooting a revolver. I shoot revolvers with my thumbs down.