Boudiepitbull
Member
They exist to create that unsettled feeling in me that somehow I won't feel complete until I've filled a shelf in my safe with unfluted revolvers in all the calibers I already own...
...added strength...and added weight on heavy recoiling revolvers...
...the five shot ones put the cylinder locking notches between cylinders instead of over them...
I'm sorry, but I think they make the revolver look unfinished and cheap, like a Ruger.
They are the same caliber though.
THESE ARE SOME BEAUTIFUL EXAMPLES. I LIKE CYLINDERS SANS FLUTES ESP ON BLUED GUNS. IT NEGATES CONSTANT CLEANING OF THE FLUTES, THAT CAN CONTRIBUTE TO THINNING OF THE BLUE ON SHARP EDGES.....
First ones I had were Ruger Blackhawk single action convertibles, 45 Colt/ 45 a.c.p. or 357/9mm. I always thought it was to differentiate the calibres.
Almost like someone lost the cylinder and stuck a craftsman socket in there to fool someone.
On the right gun they look cool as hell.![]()
both my Heritage and new Ruger .22 combos have a separate cylinder for magnum; I assumed it was to have a bold differentiation to prevent a doofus from putting the wrong cartridge in: a safety feature.
can you image a doofus putting a .22 lr into a magnum cylinder? after I finally pried the shell out...
also: all the gushing over how the smooth one looks must make this topic a finalist for esoteric fetishes of the world.
also: all the gushing over how the smooth one looks must make this topic a finalist for esoteric fetishes of the world.