Allright, this thread is trolling for someone to post to the contrary.
YOU decide if my post is that post or not.
Today, I took my 6-inch Taurus Model 66 to the range. This is a revolver I bought from a buddy, paid him $325 for it. I named the price. He didn't "need money", he just realized that he's a 3 or 4 inch tube guy and he just had no desire to keep a 6-inch revolver any more. If I didn't want it, it was going away at the next gun show. And I bought it only because he'd let me interview it for a range trip. I've had it little more than a year and I've put around 1,100 rounds through it.
That was key, because I don't buy Taurus guns anymore if I don't have hands-on, on-range experience with them. Why? For obvious reasons. Taurus has LONG AGO figured out how to make good guns. They just refuse to do it with all of what they ship. I worry about what percentage of them would qualify.
And this one? It fills a perfect role for me. It's the .357 Magnum that will shoot anything I make and I don't worry about it. Screaming 125gr loads that will crack and bust a K-frame? Meh, I'll shoot them in the Taurus. If I kill it...it was a Taurus.
This revolver is superbly accurate. I
love that because I test handloads in it. If I don't punch small groups with any particular handload, I don't sign off on it as something I want to produce in volume.
Of course... I can't cock it single action with any manner of serious strength or vigor -- if I do, it'll skip half way past the intended cylinder.
I can shoot it double action, which I usually do, and most times it won't "hitch" and grind. It's all Taurus guts in there and EXACTLY as posted above, these guts couldn't be Smith & Wesson if God himself blessed them and claimed them the 8th wonder of the world. And the double action, when it doesn't bind or hitch, does discharge about 97% of the time. Out of 220 shots fired today, I only had 6 that didn't discharge when I pulled the trigger. Please don't attempt any ignorant comments re: handloads, my ammo is better than the crap most purchase at Wal-Mart.
I want to replace the hammer spring, but Wolff only offers a LIGHTER one. I seem to need a heavier one...?! 6 fails to fire out of 220 is SIX more than I will accept from all of my other revolvers...
But I'm keeping this one. Because it's accurate, because I know it's got it's "Taurus problems" and because I'm not afraid to beat the ever-lovin' snot out of with heavy handloads. We'll see how long it lasts. It's replaceable if it doesn't endure.