Some Eye Candy : Cimarron 1860 "McCulloch Colt" Anyone Else?

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The fluted cylinder 1860 Army is by far, THE most graceful and beautiful Colt percussion revolver in my humble opinion. I gifted my youngest Son my mid 90's Uberti, with an included shoulder stock for his 30th birthday this past September. The lovely Mrs. Bulls' Eye, sensing my loss, gifted me this new Uberti for Christmas last year.... Such a kind and caring Wife, absolutely stirs one's soul!

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Where did you get that holster! I NEED one!
 
You're no going to believe this. However my wife did, she knows my gun buying habits.

I checked out the Midwayusa Uberti 1860 fluted that's on sale and thought, "why not". Then I got to thinking I might have bought one at Gunbroker a few years ago, better check first. Sure enough I had one tucked away and it's a Western Arms gun exactly like the model I traded off back in 1983. It has a silver plated trigger guard. Apparently I already cured my loneliness for one.

I'm inspired now to look for a replacement for the 1851 Squareback I traded off.

I guess it's time to get back to shooting my cap and ball revolvers.
I have a Western Arms 1851 but it is not a square back.
 
I just wonder, if those black plastic 9mm's will ever have anything, that remotely complementary, said about them??????
"They are reliable!"

"They function properly straight from the factory."

"17 rounds!!!!!"

"Pretty is, as pretty does!" :)

"Wuddayuh mean, 'No soap and water bath after shootin'???"
 
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I have a Western Arms 1851 but it is not a square back.
Thanks, I've got a Pietta. If I happen across a squareback I might bite. I spent a couple hours this morning going over my cap & ball revolvers, wiping them down with Barricade and I think I have enough to last me, even if I live to be 150 years old. 😃
 
"They are reliable!"

"They function properly straight from the factory."

"17 rounds!!!!!"

"Pretty is, as pretty does!" :)

"Wuddayuh mean, 'No soap and water bath after shootin'???"
Col. Cooper once related a news article after a German policewoman was involved in a shooting with an armed robber. In the article her police chief noted that she had fired all 17 rounds from the Austrian wunderpistole and that previously, “she’d have had to reload twice in order to accomplish this feat.” Col. Cooper noted that even experts sometimes forget that the point of shooting is hitting.
 
Col. Cooper once related a news article after a German policewoman was involved in a shooting with an armed robber. In the article her police chief noted that she had fired all 17 rounds from the Austrian wunderpistole and that previously, “she’d have had to reload twice in order to accomplish this feat.” Col. Cooper noted that even experts sometimes forget that the point of shooting is hitting.
Yeah, having never been in a fight where hot lead was whizzing by my ears I can't help but wonder if my shooting skills of a life time of target shooting might desert me in my time of need !
I have a good friend that has three purple hearts and still carries shrapnel from Vietnam in him, tell me that it's just "different" (my words not his) when the air is full of traces "really" close by and your on your belly and chin trying to get even lower in the dirt.
 
Yeah, having never been in a fight where hot lead was whizzing by my ears I can't help but wonder if my shooting skills of a life time of target shooting might desert me in my time of need !
I have a good friend that has three purple hearts and still carries shrapnel from Vietnam in him, tell me that it's just "different" (my words not his) when the air is full of traces "really" close by and your on your belly and chin trying to get even lower in the dirt.
yes. Different at first, then you begin to remember the fundamentals. Some guys don’t seem to, we wasted a metric ton of ammunition over there.
The best and worst thing about tracers is that they indicate in both directions.
 
Col. Cooper once related a news article after a German policewoman was involved in a shooting with an armed robber. In the article her police chief noted that she had fired all 17 rounds from the Austrian wunderpistole and that previously, “she’d have had to reload twice in order to accomplish this feat.” Col. Cooper noted that even experts sometimes forget that the point of shooting is hitting.
Thank you, Captain...

!CownloPad.jpg
 
Getting done what is obvious, is the question, when your scared out of your mind and is the BIG unknown here ! One never really knows for sure how they will respond until the proverbial schnitt hits the fan where they live ! Some folks can think and move under great stress and others freeze up. Training helps mitigate this but is no guarantee.
 
Getting done what is obvious, is the question, when your scared out of your mind and is the BIG unknown here ! One never really knows for sure how they will respond until the proverbial schnitt hits the fan where they live ! Some folks can think and move under great stress and others freeze up. Training helps mitigate this but is no guarantee.
It’s obvious from the outside but no one knows until they know. Even then, guys are heroes one day and crapping and crying the next.
 
It’s obvious from the outside but no one knows until they know. Even then, guys are heroes one day and crapping and crying the next.
I would guess that carpet bombing, artillery or mortar fire the most frightening and nerve wrecking experiences that can be endured and survived by troops in the field and is accumulative to every one. Apparently being shot at is not as terrifying as one usually has some factor of control still available.
 
The cap and balls are a ton of fun.
Indeed! And useful, and beautiful, and interesting…

You're no going to believe this. However my wife did, she knows my gun buying habits.

I checked out the Midwayusa Uberti 1860 fluted that's on sale and thought, "why not". Then I got to thinking I might have bought one at Gunbroker a few years ago, better check first. Sure enough I had one tucked away and it's a Western Arms gun exactly like the model I traded off back in 1983. It has a silver plated trigger guard. Apparently I already cured my loneliness for one.

I'm inspired now to look for a replacement for the 1851 Squareback I traded off.

I guess it's time to get back to shooting my cap and ball revolvers.

How many of us can relate to this situation. “Oops! Forgot about that one!”
 
The May/June issue of True West arrived today, and I was pleased to find a terrific article by Phil Spangenberger dedicated to the McCullough Colts:


True West May 2024 McCullough.jpg

The article is well-written, providing a good historical background, and it is nicely illustrated. Mr. Spangenberger also acknowledges the Cimarron reproduction of this revolver in a sidebar. I think it's great to see the mainstream media giving coverage of muzzleloading and cap & ball arms, especially when it concerns some of the historically significant but lesser known guns, like this one. I found there is a lot I did not know about them.

The cover of this issue looks like this:

True West May 2024 Cover.jpg
Obviously, they have a feature article on Bass Reeves, the lawman, but there are also articles about Apache scouts and Edward S. Curtis, the famous photographer, who evidently knew George Custer. I haven't read those yet, so can't comment.

Best regards,

Notchy Bob
 
Yeah, having never been in a fight where hot lead was whizzing by my ears I can't help but wonder if my shooting skills of a life time of target shooting might desert me in my time of need !

You can get some idea from how you have reacted to when your life was on the line and did you panic, freeze or keep your cool and get it done?

One of the better ones was a Street Cop in KC that won his gun fight though he was awful on the range. Then the uber range guy gets into a gun fight and looses.

Has nothing to do with what a person quality is, physically drives you and that is genetics. You can train to a degree but in the end, its do you pucker up or let go. Or as I told the pilot as the helicopter was going out of control, you needed a horizon and I was the only one who could wipe the fogged up windscreen, it was my butt on the line, the rest of you guys are just lucky I am selfish!

Keeping it on BP, Civil War had 20% of the shooters that did 80% of the killing. They just had that inherent ability to stay cool under fire.

I knew one guy who was pretty old but quiet, almost meek and mild and a former school teacher. I had to revise my thinking when his daughter gave me the Band of Brothers book and pay attention to the names. Yep, he jumped in Normandy and fought on through to the end.
 

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