- Joined
- Aug 7, 2019
- Messages
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What's the difference between the 1858 and the 1860?
Back in the 19th century, Colt and Remington were two of the biggest competitors vying for lucrative military contracts and the even bigger civilian market where owning what the military used meant "you could trust your life on it" or whatever the marketing was back then. Name recognition has never changed. Remington came out with the 1858 and Colt came out with the 1860, both .44 cal. The 1851 is a .36 cal Colt Navy model. With modern manufacturing the only difference is what fits better in your hand and what you think looks cooler. I prefer the 1860, it's probably lighter than an 1858 but I've never weighed them so I don't know. Both models are a good choice. I prefer the Uberti brand slightly more than Pietta, but they are both nice.
The 1858 offered by Uberti or Pietta is a clone of the 1858 Remington so they most closely match the ROA you originally searched for.
So what parts break on the ROA that can't be replaced?
Probably none of them, but $#!* happens and I don't want to have to hunt down a 20 dollar screw from a fleabayer when it does?
What's a fair price for a Uberti or Pietta?
Hard to say. Depends on if you buy new or used and what model you get and who is having a sale on them. 300-350 for a steel frame brand new in box from a major retailer, considerably less for a brass frame? Though Cabelas has the occasional sale for 200 bucks or you could get lucky and pick one up from a pawn shop for 10 bucks but stuff like that never happens to me. One recommendation I would give is that you should buy the steel frame model over the brass one. During the Civil War, iron was difficult for the South to acquire and then manufacture with for any number of reasons and they started producing brass framed revolvers. You may see the modern reproductions getting called the Union model for a steel frame and Confederate for the brass. I'm not really equipped to debate metallurgy past or present like some of the other members here probably are, and I've never really heard of a brass frame getting stretched out of spec, but for the piece of mind I just pay the extra money and go with the steel framed models.
If you see an ad on a forum, you should first google the item to see if it is a good deal and then who the seller is. Log Cabin Shop, Track of the Wolf, Midway, Cabelas, DixieGunWorks places like that to get a good idea what the going value is and then do a little homework on the seller if you think the price is fair for the condition. Since you are sending your money first maybe be weary about buying from someone who just signed up yesterday, stuff like that.
Good luck finding what you want and feel free to ask me any more questions here or in a PM!
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