Might not be your favorite but you sure wont mind having it! Pics n range report due up next!
My problem is I keep mine with an 1851 Navy, so by comparison, it always seems rather small. Luckily (?) I don't have a Walker to dwarf the Nayy.
I always felt the 1849 looked out of place when used as a prop in CW period studio photographs.
You go, Bruce!Thank you all for your advice. I will 71 in a few weeks and I am determined to do what *I* want to do. I know it's a Remington replica. I know it is small. That is why I want it. It won't be the smallest gun I have ever fired. If it goes BOOM and makes a hole in the paper occasionally, I will be happy. It will not be my carry gun. I will carry it from the loading bench to the firing line. And when I am not shooting it, it will hang in the safe next to my other Remington and Colt replicas.
As I said, 71. No filters anymore. Thanks, guys.
I have a Uberti copy with a 4" barrel. Nice looking, feels good in hand. Playing card accurate at 15 yards, which is just fine. Now the negative. Unless you replace the nipples, which are fairly difficult to find as they are unique to this model, you will have cap jams most every shot. This gets annoying quite quickly. The Uberti uses a .330 round ball, not common, and buckshot loads very hard as it is not pure lead. I finally found a discontinued .330 single cavity mold, and I now cast balls for it, which eases loading. I shoot it because I bought it, but wouldn't buy it again. The Uberti Pocket Police in .36 is even worse, never got two shots in a row without a cap jam. Watch Mike Bellevue's youtube video on the Pocket Police and you will quickly understand the veracity of what I am saying. Wish I knew the problems before I paid $329, plus another $40 for nipples, before I bought one of these. YMMV.
It has been years ago, but I think it was an outfit called Badman Bullets. I don't see that they currently have a listing for the "pocket model" nipples. Even back then, they were difficult to find, and to make matters more complicated, they came in two different lengths. I got the wrong ones first, and had to go through the hassle of returning and getting the correct ones. Even now with replacement nipples, it jams with fair regularity. IMO the mainspring is too weak and allows the hammer to blow back and the cap to fall into the works when firing. The new nipple helped some, but I still have to **** deliberately each time, making sure the just fired cap gets out of the way.Where did you get the nipples? I have one and would like to replace the nipples. BB
Track of the Wolf shows a PTC-PI (steel) AND PTC-PS (stainless) nipple for the .31 and .36 Colt and Remington Pocket Revolvers. They use a #12-28 thread and are shorter than normal nipples. They are sized for #11 caps.Where did you get the nipples? I have one and would like to replace the nipples. BB
Thank you all for your advice. I will 71 in a few weeks and I am determined to do what *I* want to do. I know it's a Remington replica. I know it is small. That is why I want it. It won't be the smallest gun I have ever fired. If it goes BOOM and makes a hole in the paper occasionally, I will be happy. It will not be my carry gun. I will carry it from the loading bench to the firing line. And when I am not shooting it, it will hang in the safe next to my other Remington and Colt replicas.
My first BP revolver was one just like yours w/6" barrel. I loved it, but had to work away from home when I was 18 and my dear old daddy got dry and sold it for some Old Forester. Never got another, but I'd buy one if I could afford it. Buy It!I used to own this Replica Arms El Paso Texas (ASM) 1848 Pocket 6". It shot well enough but I could not get comfortable with it because of its small size. I much prefer the 1851 Navy.
Regards,
Jim
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