We have a pretty neat mix of folks on this forum !
Some of us enjoy reenacting, shooting at rendezvous & a few of us like myself have enjoyed all facets including being a hard core competitor at the range.
What Mike aka 45D has posted concerning making revolvers more reliable & consistently accurate means very little to those who just occasionally shoot but this old competitor has learned a couple of new tuning tricks from Mike's well illustrated forum postings.
Since joining this forum a couple years ago I've been very impressed by the number of helpful tips & advice offered up professional gunsmiths, shooters & builders on this forum.
Assistance & tips from these generous folks make it's easier for new shooters to get started & if our historical sport lives or dies.
Having been a pretty fair firearm mechanic & antique gun collector for about 60 years I was fortunate start competition with original Colts & Remingtons that produced excellent consistent groups.
In later years when I shooting various mfg replica revolvers to reduce wear on my originals, specs on the originals made it clear what modifications were necessary to make the replicas shoot more accurate & function better .
At one point I had a more talented pistol mechanic change out the barrels on a couple of my replica revolvers to progressive twist rifling like the originals & that upped the scores.
To those of us who are hard core revolver competitors, having correct timing & consistent cylinder gap, correct cylinder to bore size diameters & rifling twist & adding a few modifications to the hammer & nipples = winning.
Nice part about this forum is variety,, if bored by technical stuff, we can click on another subject
Relic shooter