It's always a little spooky stepping up the recoil when you haven't been there. I got the Ruger .454 Super Redhawk, 7 1/2 inch, for a specific purpose, bear defense. The trip into bear country fell through so, do I have something I don't need? the answer is no, I now have something I love. Thankfully, I got it used for $650. I figured it hasn't been shot all that much. Ammo is too expensive and hard to eject. I put in another $130 in gunsmith work to help with the ejection issue.
I spent a considerable effort finding ammo, .45 and .454. Where I live, you all just can't walk into a store and buy .454 except this one shop that had Winchester 260 gr. that specs out at about 1800 ft/sec. And I web-shopped some Buffalo Bore. Easier to pick up lots of .45 colt, including .45 +P.
Well, have to admit the .454 kicks, first time, it beat the hell out of my hand. But I have figured out how to hold better and now I could shoot it a lot more. The .454 also emits an extra shock wave that is felt up the firing line. For me, this is a fun gun to shoot.
So, this revolver shoots a spectrum of ammo from low recoil cowboy load .45 to regular load .45, to +P which gets into the .44 Mag range, to another spectrum of .454. I like that kind of versatility.
A semi-auto needs to stay in a certain power range to maintain the recoil balance. So, I was wondering what to do with my Sig P220, which now seems so low powered. But every gun has a purpose and so does the .45 semi. I'll keep it.
Next I want to scope the .454 because it is really designed for longer range shots. I am figuring on something like a 2X6 Leupold. The collection just seems to grow a little over time.
I spent a considerable effort finding ammo, .45 and .454. Where I live, you all just can't walk into a store and buy .454 except this one shop that had Winchester 260 gr. that specs out at about 1800 ft/sec. And I web-shopped some Buffalo Bore. Easier to pick up lots of .45 colt, including .45 +P.
Well, have to admit the .454 kicks, first time, it beat the hell out of my hand. But I have figured out how to hold better and now I could shoot it a lot more. The .454 also emits an extra shock wave that is felt up the firing line. For me, this is a fun gun to shoot.
So, this revolver shoots a spectrum of ammo from low recoil cowboy load .45 to regular load .45, to +P which gets into the .44 Mag range, to another spectrum of .454. I like that kind of versatility.
A semi-auto needs to stay in a certain power range to maintain the recoil balance. So, I was wondering what to do with my Sig P220, which now seems so low powered. But every gun has a purpose and so does the .45 semi. I'll keep it.
Next I want to scope the .454 because it is really designed for longer range shots. I am figuring on something like a 2X6 Leupold. The collection just seems to grow a little over time.