That would be the Rigdon-Ansley made in Augusta, Georgia.Norinco said:Which Confederate knockoff Colt 1851 had a cylinder with twelve bolt notches? I remember seeing a picture of it somewhere.
Zonie said:If only 5 chambers are loaded the hammer can rest on the unloaded chambers uncapped nipple and the cylinder cannot turn.
The better reproduction Colts also have a small pin located on the rear of the cylinder between each nipple.
These pins are safety devices meant to have the hammer face lowered down on one of them.
The pin fits into the slot on the face of the hammer and prevents the cylinder from rotating.
Of course, if the hammer is raised slightly it will disengage from the pin allowing the cylinder to rotate.
Remington cut big notches into the rear of their cylinder for the nose of the hammer.
With the hammer nose in one of these notches the cylinder cannot rotate.
As with the Colt, if the hammer is raised, disengaging the nose from the cylinder notch the cylinder can rotate.
The safest way is to just load 5 chambers and rest the hammer on the unloaded chambers uncapped nipple.
My reading indicates this was fairly common with civilian revolver owners back in the day.
AKA "earning a Darwin Award".slumlord44 said:Putting a capped gun in a car is an accident looking for a place to happen and illegal. When people get killed doing something like that I call it death by stupidity.
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