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Talk:Colt Model 1855: Difference between revisions
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Why were revolving rifles and shotguns never commercially successful? I heard somewhere that it was because the gas leaking from the front of the cylinder would burn the shooters support hand. This makes sense but I have never heard it confirmed. -[[User:Anonymous|Anonymous]] | Why were revolving rifles and shotguns never commercially successful? I heard somewhere that it was because the gas leaking from the front of the cylinder would burn the shooters support hand. This makes sense but I have never heard it confirmed. -[[User:Anonymous|Anonymous]] | ||
:I heard it was because early powder and ball revolvers had the risk of all five or six cylinders going off at once and blowing the gun in half, and you wouldn't want your hand in front of the open cylinders. Once metallic cartridges came about, there were better options for repeating rifles. I don't remember where I heard this from, maybe Tales of the Gun? --[[User:Funkychinaman|funkychinaman]] 15:18, 26 August 2010 (UTC) | :I heard it was because early powder and ball revolvers had the risk of all five or six cylinders going off at once and blowing the gun in half, and you wouldn't want your hand in front of the open cylinders. Once metallic cartridges came about, there were better options for repeating rifles. I don't remember where I heard this from, maybe Tales of the Gun? --[[User:Funkychinaman|funkychinaman]] 15:18, 26 August 2010 (UTC) | ||
Revision as of 21:24, 26 August 2010
Picture
Is the rifle on the picture a DENIX-replica? The finish looks strange somehow. --84.181.225.202 15:49, 7 June 2010 (UTC)Paul_Baeumer
Failure
Why were revolving rifles and shotguns never commercially successful? I heard somewhere that it was because the gas leaking from the front of the cylinder would burn the shooters support hand. This makes sense but I have never heard it confirmed. -Anonymous
- I heard it was because early powder and ball revolvers had the risk of all five or six cylinders going off at once and blowing the gun in half, and you wouldn't want your hand in front of the open cylinders. Once metallic cartridges came about, there were better options for repeating rifles. I don't remember where I heard this from, maybe Tales of the Gun? --funkychinaman 15:18, 26 August 2010 (UTC)