I know we all probably have our unmentionable but does anyone carry bp revolver for the just incase? My problem with BP revolvers is I never had one that you could hit a big dog with at 15 yards. Or a small
I know we all probably have our unmentionable but does anyone carry bp revolver for the just incase? My problem with BP revolvers is I never had one that you could hit a big dog with at 15 yards. Or a small car.
Yes. I EDC a cap & ball revolver regularly. An oversized Armi San Marco 1858 .44 in the winter mostly, and an 1851 colt snubby with birds head grip in 44 in the warmer months. I also have several NAA bp mini revolvers that fit snuggly in my boot or ankle holster. They go with me when I wanna be inconspicuous.
Sometimes I'll leave the house wearing a stainless ruger vaquero 45 colt in an old west drop holster. I'm in West Texas and have an advantage that noone really cares what you have on your hip. If'in they do, I'll let the sheriff explain their right to mind their own business to them.
Due to an influx of West Coast methheads and all aound degenerates coming into the area over the last few years I've had to draw on a few folks and hold them till a deputy could cart them away. So far the mere sight of a 44 wheel gun pointed at'em has been enough to persuade the two legged varmits to stop what they were doing.
Even though I've been an FFL for over 25 years and have access to just about every modern handgun you could ever wanna shoot, I like carrying the old wheel guns 'cause they fit well in my hand and I'm good with them.
The only rule is: carry what you can shoot best. We practice shooting our handguns with golf balls at 50 yards. If you can hit a golf ball, you can hit a man, or a rabid critter.
I taught my kids to pop shotgun primers with their rough riders at 25 yards when they were little. Raise'm right and they'll be fine when they grow up..
Until I started reading the internet forums, I didn't realize that their were people who owned guns that didn't know how to shoot. It doesn't matter what you carry if you can't hit your target. Capacity doesn't even factor into the equation if one well placed shot (the first shot) ends the threat. I also have several favorite modern handguns that I carry from time to time. I am just as confident with them as I am the old style ones. I've killed all kinds of critters, big and small, with a cap & ball revolver. I know how they work and how to keep from having any problems with them. Mine always go bang. Cap problems are user error, chain fire stories are born from plumb stupidity, and if they don't go bang when you pull the trigger, you did it wrong.
Carry what is comfortable in your hand, and what you can shoot accurately. The only way anyone can know what that is, is to practice until it is second nature.