That's what many of them did, sometimes up to four. I've heard the movie Josie Wales being bashed here, but there is truth in carrying several revolvers at a time.Forget the second cylinder. I'd sooner carry a second revolver.
That's what many of them did, sometimes up to four. I've heard the movie Josie Wales being bashed here, but there is truth in carrying several revolvers at a time.Forget the second cylinder. I'd sooner carry a second revolver.
Very true.I don’t know… most people have vivid imaginations…
I couldn't even see a tack at 100 yards!Very true.
I bought an "American Long Rifle" and a friend couldn't understand why the thing wasn't able to drive tacks at 100yds like in the movies/tv.
Actually, it's true. I saw it the last time I was out there. The tail gunner opened fire on me. Punched some holes in my Buick......TRUTH!
I'll bet there is a B-17 on the far side of the moon, the National Enquirer said so. So, if they wrote it......
We should all be grateful that Nick has come along to explain things to us. And he even bought Manuel along. Thanks Nick.So the military, after 30 plus inspectors have looked at the pistols in question and passed them all, just passed on a design flaw? Note also that the War department continually praised the Colt 1860 Army for its accuracy. Is it possible that they didn’t notice that every single example shot into 2” at 25 yards… 12” high?
As long as the tack is at least 8” in diameter I have no problem seeing one at a 100.I couldn't even see a tack at 100 yards!
I've shot a lot stuff with .22LR, the wallop of a .44 Army seems way above that.I'm not sure where this thread diverged from muzzleloading, but back some years ago a friend of mine published a monthly called "The Trade Blanket" on black powder stuff, and we did a fairly extensive comparison of the relative force delivered to the target by various cap-n-ball revolvers as compared to that delivered by modern handguns. We tested the .36 Navies and the .44 Armies primarily, with a tip o' the hat to the .31 Pocket models and the .44 Walker. We discovered and documented the following surprising information: The .44 Army revolver - and mine was a Colt 1860 and several clones - delivered slightly more kinetic energy to a target than a modern .22 RF solid nose lead bullet such as Federals. The .36 Navies slightly less. The .31 Pocket was right up there with a .22 Short, and the .44 Walker (DGW Clone) was the "magnum," surprising nobody. All were tested with Dupont powder, CCI caps, felt wads, and round ball loads. We didn't have a chronograph but our test target was a ballistic pendulum with a numerical readout and we shot multiple 5-shot groups and compared the mean values of each sample with the mean values achieved with the modern loads. For the record, the .45 Colt and .45 ACP loads exceeded them all, even the Walker. We published the results. That was at least 30 years ago.
Appropos of nothing, General "Black Jack" Pershing was a serving officer during the Moro Rebellion and distinguished himself by putting down that uprisinng. He favored the 1873 Colt "Artillery" model, I'm told. The Moros were radical Muslims.
First shot does the same to adjacent cylinders blowing the lube out and over the gun I use a liquid lube now, one or two drops over the ball, seems to work for my general blasting pleasure.Shooting any cap n' ball revolver in the Sonoran Desert where I live will result in the "lube" dripping out all over the place and coating everything (including you) in a fine mist of the stuff. Who ever invented felt over wads deserves a bottle of Scotch.
At gun shows I like to ask “how much is it withOUT the story”?Just remember, You are buying the item, NOT the story
A forum member who shoots original Colts says they hit high at 25, just like the reproductionsSo you guys really think that the army ordinance dept required Colt and Remington to shoot 12" high at 25yrds and be dead on 75 yards but they never put in writing anywhere ............. One of the major factors in getting a govt contract was price point and these sights are literally the most cost efective thing they could come up with that still worked. Pistol duels at the time happened at10 paces or about 30ft. these sights are dead on at that range.. Until someone can show written documentation from the army or one of the manufacturers I am going with the 75 yard zero being intentional is an urban myth. Prove me wrong and that would be super exciting and interesting reading. I was working in an attic a decade or so ago and found newspapers from 1861. needless to say my work production was rather limited that day
This is correct.A forum member who shoots original Colts says they hit high at 25, just like the reproductions
The Colt Paterson and later the Walker were designed with the intent to be used by Rangers to fight Indians , from horseback. Samuel Colt would not have developed the genius design of a revolving pistol and just throw sights on them as an afterthought that all just happened to hit at an 80 yard zero
Rifled-Muskets hit high at 100 even at the 100 yard sight setting, soldiers were trained , if they received training , to aim at the belt of enemy soldiers
A revolver that hits 2 feet low at 100 yards would be way more useless than a revolver that can be held at the belt of an intended target and hit somewhere on a man sized target from 0 to 100
Colt designed the revolvers so he would give his primarily military contract customers, an effective tool to kill people with so he could make money. Hitting people with bullets as intended was the goal, not bullseye shooting.
I fired my Dance and Brothers .44 one handed at a 100 yard silhouette, and hit it 4 times out of 6 , and the other 2 would have hit the guy next to him or behind him. I'm far from a Master pistol shooter. It's not that far, people act like hitting things at 100 is like a 1000 yard rifle shot.Having the revolvers sighted in for 75 yards may or may not be true.
I really don’t remember any of my replica revolvers shooting high. They seemed to be right on at 15 to 25 yards. My 1870s Colt Thuer conversion has a really short front sight too. But the .44 colt cartridge only holds about 15 grains of powder anyway.
I think that the reason the revolvers shoot high is that they loaded the guns with less powder than we do today. Plus the black powder they used way back then is different from what we use today and that could be a contributing factor too.
But someone in another article mentioned that many of the pistols had different more tall front sights on them than what came out of the factories. So obviously gunsmiths were changing out the front sights for taller sights that the owner would file down to suit.
But shooting at a man sized target out to 75 yards or so should not pose a problem. A decent shot with a pistol could do that fairly well. If it shot high at closer ranges would not be a big deal as the idea is to hit the target to reduce the threat. Aiming at center mass should guaranty a hit out to 75 to 100 yards for a man size target.
You seem nice.So you guys really think that the army ordinance dept required Colt and Remington to shoot 12" high at 25yrds and be dead on 75 yards but they never put in writing anywhere ............................... One of the major factors in getting a govt contract was price point and these sights are literally the most cost efective thing they could come up with that still worked. Pistol duels at the time happened at10 paces or about 30ft. these sights are dead on at that range.. Until someone can show written documentation from the army or one of the manufacturers I am going with the 75 yard zero being intentional is an urban myth. Prove me wrong and that would be super exciting and interesting reading. I was working in an attic a decade or so ago and found newspapers from 1861. needless to say my work production was rather limited that day
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