Dr Killdeer
New member
Hi guys!
I got an 1858 Remington clone from Cabela's for Christmas in 44 caliber and I'm already addicted to it. Since the day after Christmas, I've burned up a lot of Goex, pushing out round balls, but now my greed is out of control. I'm going to buy the conversion cylinder for 45 long colt.
It looks like I have two choices for R&D type conversion cylinders. Fluted and non-fluted.
I like the look of the fluted cylinder much better, but some folks say the fluting reduces the strength of the cylinder because of the thinner steel where the fluting is cut and that makes it a bad bet for using smokeless powder in cowboy loads.
Is this something that I should consider? Am I better off buying the non fluted cylinder to add a degree of safety when shooting smokeless cowboy loads?
I got an 1858 Remington clone from Cabela's for Christmas in 44 caliber and I'm already addicted to it. Since the day after Christmas, I've burned up a lot of Goex, pushing out round balls, but now my greed is out of control. I'm going to buy the conversion cylinder for 45 long colt.
It looks like I have two choices for R&D type conversion cylinders. Fluted and non-fluted.
I like the look of the fluted cylinder much better, but some folks say the fluting reduces the strength of the cylinder because of the thinner steel where the fluting is cut and that makes it a bad bet for using smokeless powder in cowboy loads.
Is this something that I should consider? Am I better off buying the non fluted cylinder to add a degree of safety when shooting smokeless cowboy loads?