You Know I Really Am Becoming A Revolver Guy At Heart......

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cslinger

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As far as civillian, serious social, handguns are concerned I find myself gravitating more and more to revolvers. Now I am a gun guy and find myself proficient with just about anything that goes bang, thats proficient not perfect. I know how to use just about anything.

I have never held a bias against revolvers and have always thought that with every release of some new tiny, tiny wunder-auto that someone was trying to answer a question that had been more then adequately answered many moons ago with the J-Frame sized revolver

Now as far as why I find myself gravitating even more towards revolvers.

1)Super easy to load, unload, inspect etc. No bullet setback issues, no decocking, applying of safeties etc. Easy to wipe down due to ease of unloading and reloading.

2)In my experience super reliable, more so then automatics, especially itty bitty autos. Now all of my autos have been super reliable as well and most have never malfunctioned but the fact remains that in my life I have experienced at least one malfunction with every semi auto brand out there. I have NEVER personally had a malfunction with a revolver. Now I do understand the trade off is that a semi auto malfunction is usually quickly cleared vs. an revo likely being put out of action.

3)Easier for me to carry especially pocket carry and give me more confidence with the long double action pull as far as safety is concerned.

4)The ability to load any kind of ammo under the son from mild to wild from round nosed, to flat nose, to HP, SWC, lead, jacketed, crazy, buttstomping, buffalo killin', cruise missiles etc. I find that my test period is smaller when breaking in a new revolver because of their general lack of ammo sensitivity. Now I realize that there are rare occassions that certain revolvers are sensitive to ammo such as super light guns with super light bullet weights but in general they will just about literally feed rocks.

5)The single action trigger pull on a decent well broken in revolver is absolutely spectacular. I have never shot a semi auto pistol with a better trigger pull. Rifles with set triggers are better but as a rule the single action pull on a revolver is just about the best you are going to get in a normal production, no competition gun.

6)Not held back by the need of an external feeding device. Most semi auto malfunctions stem from either the magazine or the extractor in my experience. Revolvers have numerous charging methods including speed strips, speed loaders, moon clips and loose round feeding. I think this is a very strong point. Now of course this strength is balanced or outweighed by the slower reloading speed. When I say slower reloading speed I am talking about us normal folks not the Jerry Miculeks of the world.

7)In my experience the great majority of modern revolvers made by reputable companies are strong like bull. As in they would make a hell of a hammer or impact weapon. This is not really a huge strength since a good quality auto is also a very strong weapon but revolvers can typically be built to handle much higher pressures.

8)They are easy to learn and teach others to shoot. Full size .357 magnums allow anybody to shoot them due to the fact that they can be loaded with such a variety of ammo. Have a small framed friend who is recoil shy, no problem load up some .38 special. Want to go hunt the great white buffalo no problem load up some of them thar afore mentioned crazy butt stomping rounds. I think this versatility allows for a nice platform to gradually teach new shooters while ramping up slowly over time.

9)NO BRASS TO CLEAN UP. For all of you folks who don't worry about policing your brass......SHAME ON YOU. Clean your brass up and leave the place as clean or cleaner then you left it. For all you reloaders the advantage is obvious.

Now these are just a few of the big advantages I see to practical use of revolvers. As with any tool there are just as many disadvantages to the platform that need to be weighed upon and I have only touched on a couple in the above. Like most tools a personal decision needs to be made as to whether the pros outweight the cons for you personally. For me, average, suburbanite, white, married male, who carries little cash, doesn't do drugs, doesn't sleep with other folks wives etc. the revolver makes alot of sense in an EDC firearm. Were I to be going into harms way my choice would likely change to semi-automatic...............preferably one in a rifle or guage caliber but I digress.

Anyway that is my two cents and anyone reading this should take it for what it is worth, after taxes about .4 cents or not much at all. I am not a gunfighter, cop, "operator", or some kind of high speed low drag ninja. I am a regular low speed high drag guy who knows a little about guns, a little about shooting and am trying to pass along my personal experience to other folks in case they are trying to make a decision for themselve. Maybe my little diatrobe will help them go one way or the other. I have several, ok read that as a buttload of firearms of all types so I do have some practical experience with many different platforms but I am no means an expert, heck I ain't even that edumacated on the subject.

Take care, shoot safe and have fun.

Chris

A LITTLE REVOLVER ART FOR CLOSE OF THIS POST :D
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I agree, cslinger :)

If my sixgun and a reload ain't enough, then I need a rifle - or else I seriously need to reconsider where I'm going and what I'm doing.

Though others may carry whatever they want, for all I care...
 
Hal Swiggett said it best:

"Sooner or later, all thinking people get back to basics. Basic handguns are Revolvers."

I like almost anything that can be classified as a firearm. I trust my life and my family to revolvers.

Rick
 
i began with the wheel in the form of a ruger sec 6 blue 357 this was basicly a rural envoroment and the wheel did well for sometime.

then 1 year after reginald denny my wife started drivin with me and my carry became a glock because i couldnt hav my ak with me.i still use glocks for the road but when the good hollowpoints are gone glock becomes a very distant second place and the 44mag is the gun.

and while im rural the 44mags my 1st choice because ak isnt far away.
 
revolvers rule

:) yeah there great no jamming in sa and all most as fast in da there so cool there a part of are history to I have a ruger single action (22lr,22wm) it's okay but I want a ruger super black hawk in 357 ??? or in 44magnum but hogs are big were i come from so I need a horse pistol
:cool: revolvers:)
 
In my life as a middle-aged, middle-class healthcare executive living and working in a suburban and small urban environment, I rarely feel underequipped with a five or six shot snubby revolver with one set of reloads. I certainly carry large-capacity autos on occasion, but 80% of the time, a revolver meets my needs just fine.
 
When I go to the public range I notice most of the better shooters use a revolver. I don't think it's necessarily the gun that makes the difference, but I imagine as skill improves most people end up going back to basics.
 
Interesting that Reginald Denny was the straw that broke the camels back. I wonder how many people on THR even remember who Reginald Denny was? Excellent motivator to carry a gun in your truck.
 
i was bout 5 miles from denny when he was pulled from his truck and pounded.at the time my codriver was 5 yrs older than me and we both topped 250lbs he had a tire knocker and i had a buck 110 lockblade.

theyd known they screewed with the wrong hillboys when we finished.

but with the wife things change and since 2 becomes 1 the 1 needs overwealming firesuperiority.i feel the g19 with twice+4 the number of rounds a revo has provides this.
 
Lovely SP. I also "graduated" from semiautos to revolvers. I found that most semis just don't have the same "soul" as a good wheelgun. And a revolver lets you have more control--it becomes an extension of you. It can fire as fast as you can. If you're good enough it can fire far more rapidly than any semi ever could. Or it can cycle as slow as you want. It's similar to the difference between manual and automatic transmissions on a car.

Plus, you can throw a huge range of ammo in a wheelgun and it won't choke.
 
After having read the posts here I'd have to agree. I still enjoy my 1911, but I'd have to say that I'm moving more towards becoming exclusively a revolver shooter. Most due to the fact that it will handle almost anything I can stick down the pipe. I have also gotten into IDPA shooting so that I can become a better judge of tactical skills and how to use my revo in those situations if, God forbid, they ever happen.;)
 
Revolvers can and do malfunction.

Never said they couldn't and I also said that when they do malfunction they are likely to be taken out of the fight where a semi auto malfunction is typically easy to clear.

As far as reliability goes though in my personal experience I have never witnessed a revolver malfunction more serious then a piece of brass sticking when ejecting. This is with lots of shooting over the years of both semi auto and revo's. I have seen every major brand of semi auto malfunction at one time or another. Once again this is my personal experience. Of course my personal experience with my own semi autos is that the great majority of them have never malfunctioned either.

For me the beauty of the revolver is the ease or unloading and reloading. Makes for easier care of a carry weapon and I don't have to worry about things like setback.

Chris
 
and I don't have to worry about things like setback
Or bullet shape.
Or double strike capability
Or wondering if there is a round in the firing chamber
Or forgetting to clear the chamber when you unload
Or the ability to shoot lighter target/plinking loads
Or the ability to shoot shot shells
Or finding grips that fit your hand
Or hammer/slide bite
Or Limp Wristing
Or...
 
I couldn't agree more. As I've gotten older and become not only a better shot, but more knowledgable about firearms and shooting, I've been drawn to the revolver. It does seem to have more soul and I've noticed that I've become a better handgun shooter since I've gotten into shooting the wheelguns. I suppose it's becasue the revolver isn't as forgiving as the auto. Anyway I'm a dinasour now and proud of it.
 
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