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#1
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I've always liked revolvers. A few years ago, I bought a new Ruger
GP100, a stainless steel six shooter in .357/.38 Special, with a six inch barrel. Great shooter, very nicely made, but for reasons I could never discern, I never could balance it properly when shooting off-hand without working at it. The reason *may* have been the barrel was just too long for me to shoot the way I wanted. In any event, I sold that revolver to a federal law enforcement guy, and got a S&W 686 with a 4" barrel. That revolver weighs about the same as the Ruger, but for me it balances better. I don't see any qualitative differences between the two revolvers. They're both well-made. The single action pull on the S&W is the best I've encountered on a full-size, "heavy" ammo revolver, a tad better than the pull on the Ruger. Double action isn't bad, either. |
#2
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On Thu, 14 Jan 2016 14:04:21 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
I've always liked revolvers. A few years ago, I bought a new Ruger GP100, a stainless steel six shooter in .357/.38 Special, with a six inch barrel. Great shooter, very nicely made, but for reasons I could never discern, I never could balance it properly when shooting off-hand without working at it. The reason *may* have been the barrel was just too long for me to shoot the way I wanted. In any event, I sold that revolver to a federal law enforcement guy, and got a S&W 686 with a 4" barrel. That revolver weighs about the same as the Ruger, but for me it balances better. I don't see any qualitative differences between the two revolvers. They're both well-made. The single action pull on the S&W is the best I've encountered on a full-size, "heavy" ammo revolver, a tad better than the pull on the Ruger. Double action isn't bad, either. S&W Model 28. I'd tell you why, but you'd probably call me names. -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
#3
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On Thu, 14 Jan 2016 14:04:21 -0500, Keyser Söze
wrote: I've always liked revolvers. A few years ago, I bought a new Ruger GP100, a stainless steel six shooter in .357/.38 Special, with a six inch barrel. Great shooter, very nicely made, but for reasons I could never discern, I never could balance it properly when shooting off-hand without working at it. The reason *may* have been the barrel was just too long for me to shoot the way I wanted. In any event, I sold that revolver to a federal law enforcement guy, and got a S&W 686 with a 4" barrel. That revolver weighs about the same as the Ruger, but for me it balances better. I don't see any qualitative differences between the two revolvers. They're both well-made. The single action pull on the S&W is the best I've encountered on a full-size, "heavy" ammo revolver, a tad better than the pull on the Ruger. Double action isn't bad, either. I don't really have that much experience with revolvers but I do like my old Colt OM Match. It is basically like the "trooper" 357 I have but it has the bull barrel. I assume you would not like the balance. It is 40oz or so empty and a lot of it is out front. That does make muzzle flip pretty much non existent with wad cutters over 2.5 gr of Bullseye. My other 3 revolvers are 2 antique Saturday night specials and a Colt Frontier scout (.22 rf version of the SA Army) |
#4
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#5
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On 1/14/2016 2:04 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
I've always liked revolvers. A few years ago, I bought a new Ruger GP100, a stainless steel six shooter in .357/.38 Special, with a six inch barrel. Great shooter, very nicely made, but for reasons I could never discern, I never could balance it properly when shooting off-hand without working at it. The reason *may* have been the barrel was just too long for me to shoot the way I wanted. In any event, I sold that revolver to a federal law enforcement guy, and got a S&W 686 with a 4" barrel. That revolver weighs about the same as the Ruger, but for me it balances better. I don't see any qualitative differences between the two revolvers. They're both well-made. The single action pull on the S&W is the best I've encountered on a full-size, "heavy" ammo revolver, a tad better than the pull on the Ruger. Double action isn't bad, either. I've only owned three revolvers, a Ruger Single 10, a S&W Performance Center 627 and a .38 "Chief's Special". I only have the .38 now. The Ruger was a nice gun but loading and unloading it was a pain. Accurate though. .22 cal. Ended up trading it in towards something else. The S&W 627 was awesome right out of the box. 357 magnum and .38 cal. Nice gun but I found I rarely used it after taking it to the range a few times plus ammo was scarce and expensive at the time. I am not a collector or a gun nut so I sold it. The .38 will stay. Good home protection gun. Point and shoot. Favorite? Probably the S&W 627. |
#6
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On Thursday, January 14, 2016 at 2:04:24 PM UTC-5, Keyser Söze wrote:
I've always liked revolvers. Too bad THIS ISN'T A GUN GROUP, YOU ****. |
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