Posted on 08/06/2018 5:17:14 AM PDT by w1n1
Judge handguns.
Bond Derringer.
All shoot .45LC and .410
Always wanted the .22 /20gauge Savage as a kid in the 60s. It seemed to cover so many possibilities. You would only need 1 gun for everything
The saying goes “Beware the man with one gun, he knows how to use it.”
I, should pose no fear then.
I had a Tikka .243 over 12 gauge. The rear sight flipped up out of the rib. It gave a great picture and was adjustable.
I doubt a scope could have been mounted but the iron sights were fine.
One of those, I really wish I still had.
Judge handguns.
Bond Derringer.
All shoot .45LC and .410
Add the S&W Governor series.
All have fully rifled barrels. Not conducive to effective wing shooting.
This is an exception from most of the stuff he fishes up, it's actually of practical interest and might be helpful to someone out there who's on a budget...
See? We're always fair about stuff around here.
Nice article... post the whole thing?
Wouldn’t a drilling, by definition, have three barrels?
Two barrels is a zweiling...
.22/20 gauge...
18”,,,I think.
Provisions for rounds in stock
and plastic breakdown case.
Yes,I got one.
Shhhhh... don’t make the author actually do research.
I care more that FReepers get it right.
Nice!
At age 10 I missed a doe at 40 ft, shot under her.
Never saw another side by side at gunshows.
My father bought one in Mexico about forty years ago for $150. The two top barrels are 16 gaauge and the lower barrel is some kind of weird european millimeter rifle.
“Wouldnt a drilling, by definition, have three barrels?
Two barrels is a zweiling
” [null and void, post 8]
Americans have misunderstood this German word for a long time, because it looks like an English word they think they understand.
Some decades ago, American Rifleman magazine printed a question sent in to its Dope Bag column: “Could you tell me what calibers and gauges are available in European drillings?”
The answer bespoke just what null and void posted about three-barrel and two-barrel guns, and further informed Rifleman readers that a four-barrel gun would be a “vierling.”
Then about eight or ten technical drawings of variously-arranged combination-gun muzzles were printed, each with its German name, “buchse” meaning “rifle” and “flinte” meaning “shotgun.” A tongue-twisting bunch of multi-syllable German terms followed, for each drawing. The only one still in my memory is “doppelbockbuchse”, indicating a double rifle, but of what arrangment I forget. Some names were longer.
Never heard Them called “Drilling.”
Never.
“Rossi Circuit Judge.
Judge handguns.
Bond Derringer.
All shoot .45LC and .410
Add the S&W Governor series.
All have fully rifled barrels. Not conducive to effective wing shooting.” [Yo-Yo, post 6 - responding to Mogger, post 2]
Be warned that the Taurus and S&W revolvers were limited to standard-pressure 45 Colt rounds, in early versions at least. No Ruger-only nor Contender-only nor Freedom Arms overpressure loads. Fortunately, even in original or cowboy action loadings, 45 Colt is a decent self-defense cartridge.
Much of the publicity from manufacturers of these handguns has been aimed at the self-defense market, but in actuality they are an imaginative solution for hiker defense against poisonous snakes, when loaded with 410 shells firing Nr 8 shot or similar sizes. Not many hikers are good enough with a handgun to hit a snake at strike-safe ranges (scarcely beyond point blank), firing pistol round with a single projectile. 410 shells carry a usefully larger shot charge than specialty shotshells in handgun chamberings, of larger shot size; they are cheaper too, and reloadable.
Thus, back-country travelers going afield in snake country are better equipped with a Judge or Governor loaded with 410 shells, than other revolvers or auto pistols.
“One of those, I really wish I still had”
Boating accident?
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