

Moderator: Cajunkraut
I presume it would still be fireable if chopped down?I've had mine so long now in its original form that the desire to fire the thing has (at least for the time being) won out over surgery.
Oh, yeah, it'd still be fireable. The standard 262 grain (sometimes 255 grain) .455 load is, in the words of one of the gunsmiths that worked on mine, "a very mild load", and the definitely meant for close quarters work, but I'm still looking forward to it!Skippy wrote:I presume it would still be fireable if chopped down?
Yeah, I'll probably go that route; like Minnesota, I got the gun for its "Indy properties". I'm not really a collector (yet...Skippy wrote:Besides, doesn't this pic from another thread here tug you in the direction of shortening that badboy![]()
I know it makes me wish we could have handguns over here still
In that photo, we were shooting UMC .45 ACP, 185 Grain ammo that you can pick up at almost any Wal-Mart. The gun is about 65+ years old and still works great. I talked to many people and they admit that the 4 inch S&W looks great. Die hard collectors, however, shutter at the thought of chopping the barrel in that manner.Skippy wrote:
Besides, doesn't this pic from another thread here tug you in the direction of shortening that badboy![]()
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Hi, Dont think so. It was propbably just them being rude.Pyroxene wrote:That seems odd. Do they value it as an antique?Shishak wrote: Unfortunately, since it was not in the state that I actually live, they wouldn't even take it out of the case to show it to me.![]()