As I wrote in my introduction, I'm a 70 year old woman who had not touched a firearm from the time I retired from the US Army until last year. Now I'm looking to buy one for home defense and recreational shooting at the range.
I've been going to the range about once a month since November of last year. I've tried various handguns, and have pretty much settled on getting a 4" barrel .357 magnum/.38 special.
I've tried various makes of 9mm semi-automatic pistols, but they kept jamming on me because of weak wrists. I've tried shorter barrels (I'm not accurate enough with them.) and longer barrels (too unwieldy), but the 4" barrel seems just right.
So now the decision is what to buy, and that's pretty much what size cylinder to get, 6, 7, or 8 rounds. That one or two rounds may not seem like much, but they may make all the difference in a home defense situation, especially if there are two or three home invaders. I'm sure that I'm not a good enough shot to win any target-shooting competitions, but at the range, my body shots and head shots do hit the zones where I'm aiming.
I plan to use .38 ammo at the range, but have the revolver loaded with .357 ammo at home, for self defense. I shot .357 at the range once to see whether I could handle that load, and I can, but why spend the extra money for target practice.
So, with those criteria in mind, what revolvers do you recommend? And oh, yes, price is an object, but not the overriding concern; if it were, I'd get the least expensive of the bunch.
Thanks,
-- Michelle
I've been going to the range about once a month since November of last year. I've tried various handguns, and have pretty much settled on getting a 4" barrel .357 magnum/.38 special.
I've tried various makes of 9mm semi-automatic pistols, but they kept jamming on me because of weak wrists. I've tried shorter barrels (I'm not accurate enough with them.) and longer barrels (too unwieldy), but the 4" barrel seems just right.
So now the decision is what to buy, and that's pretty much what size cylinder to get, 6, 7, or 8 rounds. That one or two rounds may not seem like much, but they may make all the difference in a home defense situation, especially if there are two or three home invaders. I'm sure that I'm not a good enough shot to win any target-shooting competitions, but at the range, my body shots and head shots do hit the zones where I'm aiming.
I plan to use .38 ammo at the range, but have the revolver loaded with .357 ammo at home, for self defense. I shot .357 at the range once to see whether I could handle that load, and I can, but why spend the extra money for target practice.
So, with those criteria in mind, what revolvers do you recommend? And oh, yes, price is an object, but not the overriding concern; if it were, I'd get the least expensive of the bunch.
Thanks,
-- Michelle