plain old dave
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 474
- Location
- East TN
Must be a contrarian here. The fighting revolver IMHO was perfected in 1873 by (as the Brits would say) Colt's. A Cavalry Colt Single Action Army is a deadly fighting arm at most any visual range; the memoirs of Indian-era cavalrymen are full of accounts of shootouts with Indians out on the plains at several hundred yards with the issue Colt and its 255gr slug cooking along at 950 f/s. The 'tiny' grip eats recoil, and a story is in order.
When Elmer Keith (later inventor of the .44 Magnum) was an inspector at the Ogden Arsenal during WW2, he mentioned to some Ordinance Corps officers that the true test of handgun accuracy was long range (several hundred yards) shooting, a belief he held his entire life. After numerous incredulous comments, Elmer took a random M1911 off the line along with 2 magazines full of 230gr FMJ ammo, went out back to the long range, had a snowman built several hundred yards out, and was hitting it every time by Round 14 and the end of the second magazine. The incident is in either "Sixguns By Keith" or "H***, I Was There!" I have duplicated it with an Artillery Model (5.5" barrel).
I like Webleys, used to have an Mk II. I like the Webley Green, too. A Webley you can shoot .45 Colt shells through, best of both worlds. Just too ungainly for my taste and a little clumsy for a fighting handgun.
When Elmer Keith (later inventor of the .44 Magnum) was an inspector at the Ogden Arsenal during WW2, he mentioned to some Ordinance Corps officers that the true test of handgun accuracy was long range (several hundred yards) shooting, a belief he held his entire life. After numerous incredulous comments, Elmer took a random M1911 off the line along with 2 magazines full of 230gr FMJ ammo, went out back to the long range, had a snowman built several hundred yards out, and was hitting it every time by Round 14 and the end of the second magazine. The incident is in either "Sixguns By Keith" or "H***, I Was There!" I have duplicated it with an Artillery Model (5.5" barrel).
I like Webleys, used to have an Mk II. I like the Webley Green, too. A Webley you can shoot .45 Colt shells through, best of both worlds. Just too ungainly for my taste and a little clumsy for a fighting handgun.