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![]() "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Dan Krueger wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On Fri, 09 Dec 2005 21:20:51 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: Dan Krueger wrote: I'd take a Glock 34 any day over that wheelgun. Fully legal mag on the Glock holds 17 rounds, standard barrel is 5" long, and if you need them, lasergrips are available. Oh, and my guess is the semi-auto mechanism is inherently more accurate than the wheelgun's. You have a single or double action wheelgun? If double, you keep a chamber empty for safety's sake? If so, that means the G34 mag holds more than three times the number of rounds. How is that 17 round magazine legal? Pre-ban? Nope. Perfectly legal in Maryland. I'm not sure how you can say the semi-auto is "inherently" more accurate than a revolver. A barrel is a barrel. The same bullets pass through them. How they get to the barrel matters. True. However, I much prefer revolvers because they are simpler, easier to reload (quicker actually) and easier to handle. Their major disadvantage is number of rounds, but accuracy more than makes up for it. I own more than a few guns and I use them for sport. I do keep one or two around for self defense but that's another thread. I have revolvers and semi-auto's. How do you figure that the revolvers are more accurate? Trigger pull is similar as are the lengths of the barrels. What am I missing? Dan In a revolver, there is a bit of space between the business end of the cylinder and the back end of the barrel, where the bullet enters after the hammer strikes the round. The lineup between the bullet and the barrel isn't always perfect. Off even a bit matters, especially in match contents. In a semi auto, the round is fully in the barrel before it is set off. That's mostly a problem with either cheap guns, or old guns that have digested thousands of rounds. It's called "timing". Once fixed, it stays fixed for quite a long time. |