Cheapshooter
New member
I would much rather have the .45 Colt (or equivalent), without the compromised required by the .410 capability.
The only compromise for my PD Poly is a bit extra length. But certainly no compromise in accuracy using 45 Colt.
I would much rather have the .45 Colt (or equivalent), without the compromised required by the .410 capability.
When it comes to the Judge, it's usually people don't like the recoil with .410, the price of the ammo, or the way it patterns past a certain distance.The warranty change is no big deal because Taurus's lifetime warranty is worthless. Taurus makes some good guns (I assume they do, I've never seen one) and they make crap. If you get a crappy one, take it to a good gunsmith and maybe they can fix it; Taurus can't or won't.
As far as a used Taurus, the thing I would be worried about is why is the original purchaser selling it?
When it comes to the Judge, if it had been introduced by a company approved by the American Society of Gun Snobbery like S&W or Ruger it would have been heralded as one of the greatest innovations in firearms design in the 21st century!When it comes to the Judge, it's usually people don't like the recoil with .410, the price of the ammo, or the way it patterns past a certain distance.
It depends on the model Judge bought. The Public Defender has a very small grip and weighs less than the standard Judge does, so recoil is more, too much for some. Recoil is subjective to the shooter and I can say in a Cobray derringer, it is STIFF. In a steel frame Judge, I think it will be fine.When it comes to the Judge, if it had been introduced by a company approved by the American Society of Gun Snobbery like S&W or Ruger it would have been heralded as one of the greatest innovations in firearms design in the 21st century!
I don't find the recoil with 410 from my lightest of the Judges, Public Defender Poly, to be that objectionable. Yes, 410 shells can be a bit pricey compared to 12, or 20 guage. But on-line, and sales can help.
I'm not at all concerned with the pattern of the Federal OOO buck out to a range probably well past any self defence would require. @10 yards it's about 3" . Maybe 5 or 6 @ 15. I seriously doubt a carjacker is going to shout at me to get out of my truck from thirty to forty five feet away. The main use other than just fun blasting I have for my Poly.
The non-legged slithering snakes encountered while picking berries, or searching for mushrooms don't concern me past 10-15 feet. A distance that a load of #8 shot holds a snake stopping density should one present itself as a threat.
Keep in mind that these patterns are from the 2 1/2 barrel of a Public Defender Poly
I reload .45 Colt and have thought about doing .410 if I bought a Judge. Would be interesting for sure.
Some people bought a new Taurus (thinking they couldn't possibly screw up a 150 year old design SA revolver) only to get a lemon, and when they called Taurus to get it repaired under warranty, Taurus hung up on them. So FU about the snobbery.Cheapshooter said:When it comes to the Judge, if it had been introduced by a company approved by the American Society of Gun Snobbery like S&W or Ruger it would have been heralded as one of the greatest innovations in firearms design in the 21st century!
They wanted market share and it's easy to get market share when you're S&W and the only other brand in competition is... Taurus.S&W DID jump on the .410 revolver bandwagon very quickly.
Just a couple myth defying videos.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yNVXuspaJtE
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDMDd4eAQO0&t=297s
Thing is that with a revolver it doesn't have magazines to deal with, so you can keep it loaded for decades without an issue. I've never tried keeping a magazine loaded to full capacity for longer than a couple months, so Idk how a mag would hold up over years.The size comparison with the semi-auto was questionable because he really downplayed the grip. When it comes to concealed carry, which is the market for both guns in the video, that grip sticking way out could be a big deal. Beyond shrink-wrapping these for a volume measurement, I recommend getting them in your hands for a personal comparison. The semi-auto is a lot smaller!
Comparing it to a semi-auto firing .45acp raises some other issues too. Did he not have a Bulldog available? That would have been better. Comparing the Judge to self-defense weapons in general, it should have been compared with what people carry in general. Heck, why not compare it to compact high-capacity 9mm handguns?
Part 2 was more interesting. Yes, special rounds have been developed for the Judge and those do better. That helps. Is it enough to make it more useful than a high-capacity compact semi-auto (or even a full-sized semi-auto in some cases) that you could probably carry with more ease? When considering the demands of EDC, is it enough to make it more useful than a five or six shot J-frame or LCR?
The reviewer seems to agree with me on concealed carry but somehow concludes that the Public Defender would be a good nightstand gun. I'd agree that it could be. Then again, so could a lot of guns. You could put something like the 15-shot FNX-45 in your nightstand just as easily. Personally, I'd prefer that or many other handgun choices, maybe including the full-sized Judge, over the Public Defender as a nightstand gun.
Thing is that with a revolver it doesn't have magazines to deal with, so you can keep it loaded for decades without an issue. I've never tried keeping a magazine loaded to full capacity for longer than a couple months, so Idk how a mag would hold up over years.
It's one of the reasons I mostly keep revolvers around the house.
I agree on the CCW aspect vs a J frame/LCR. I don't think the PD shines as a CCW choice, but it can work in the role.