From the ad.
Available in 45 Colt or 357 Magnum with multiple barrel lengths and finishes.
From the ad.
Well, people said “irregardless” so often, eventually it got put in the dictionaries.
The correct word is “regardless”, meaning “without regard”.
“Irregardless” is a double negative.
I imagine back in the day folks that owned them just went to the store and ordered .45 from SearsRoebuck.mail
Just so younz have something else to discuss, am still calling all handguns pistols, of which there are revolvers and semi-autos.
just so younz have something else to discuss, am still calling all handguns pistols, of which there are revolvers and semi-autos.
Revolvers were pistols long before semi autos came on the scene. Single shots were pistols long before revolvers were on the scene. They're all pistols, just different types.Just so younz have something else to discuss, am still calling all handguns pistols, of which there are revolvers and semi-autos.
Should have said if memory holds, which is highly uncertain the last couple years or soand single shots!!!!!
I'd heard that way back when, Colt and Winchester had a gentleman's agreement: You make the revolvers, (and not rifles), Colonel, we'll make the rifles (but not in .45 LC and stay out of your revolver business.)I have often heard how concern about the small thin .45 Colt case rim was the reason there are no period contemporary lever guns in .45 Colt. The makers didn't think the rim would hold up to the lever gun's feed & ejection cycle.
Not only that but the cartridge cases of the time were copper and not brass. Once fouling started to build up the extractor would tear through the case rim.The thin bottle neck cartridge cases sealed the chamber when shooting black powder. The 45 Colt case will not seal and the fowling will get into the action and hinder operations.