Odd, I wonder how they get around the issues with the .50"< bore - anything that large is a DD unless exempted specifically. I had heard the Raging Judge would be a .454/410, as shown on their website under "raging judge".
This one looks new. I know the Raging Judge Magnum is in .410/.45LC/.454Casull. Maybe this thing really is 28ga? Who knows what the Taurus designers are thinking anymore?
the .410 judge was the answer to the question no one asked...now this???
the only thing harder to find than .410 shells is 28 gauge shells
does 28 gauge buckshot even exist?
a little googling shows that the biggest stuff around is #5 shot for pheasants
More to the point, it's over .50" bore, 28 ga is ~.550". No commercial handgun ammo will fit that, so it's either rifled for no reason (which means it's a DD unless it has the ONLY exception for a revolving shotgun over .50"), or smoothbore, with means it's an AOW. Either way, I'm not thinking it'll be getting into the country very easily if at all.
lol. what i wouldn't mind seeing it a big old 20 or 12 gauge revolver, only 2 or 3 chambers with a huge cylinder. so ridiculous i would have to own it.
I'm holding out for the 4 gauge / 1" Gatling Gun version. Though I suppose, with that length of cylinder and the 28 ga. .550" bore diameter, they might be able to load up a .550 Express. http://www.weaponsmith.com/550-exp.html
I'm trying to see how it is legal and not a short barreled shotgun. There is no cartridge that can be shot through it like the .45 Colt. No one make 28 gauge buck shot or slugs. Any cartridge over .50 is considered a destructive device, not counting ancient african hunting rounds and shotshell rounds.
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