Finally made it to the range with the Titanium 850 CIA I bought last month. I sent it back to Taurus before even shooting it because it was so tight, the forcing cone was touching the cylinder face and was scraping against it when opening and closing the cylinder. This also caused the trigger to lock up several times. It came back all fixed up and with a very smooth trigger as I found when dry firing it.
I shot 75 rounds of .38 special. This revolver is .38/.38+P, no .357.
The only .38+P I had on hand was Federal Nyclad and since they're not making it anymore, I didn't shoot any +P this time.
The trigger was very smooth in practice and recoil was very manageable. The ported barrel really does reduce muzzle flip. I had a S&W 642 8 years ago and the recoil on the Taurus is a fair amount easier to handle due to the porting. The 850 CIA looks almost exactly like S&W 442/642 as far as I can tell. I could see a brief flash from the ports as I fired but it did not interfere in any way, was not blinding although I obviously wasn't shooting in the dark.
I haven't shot any of my revolvers in awhile but I surprised myself with my accuracy. I moved the target out to 45 feet and had some decent groups, for me anyway. I didn't stage the trigger, just pulled it smoothly. It was easy to keep it on target. I had done a bit a dry firing before hand and that helped.
Very pleased with this revolver. It is light (16 ounces) but very manageable to somone who doesn't get to shoot as often as I need/want to. THis is my first Taurus, revolver or otherwise. I have 4 S&W revolvers also - 60, 66, 65 LS and 686.
Here it is:
http://www.taurususa.com/titanium/m850t.html
I shot 75 rounds of .38 special. This revolver is .38/.38+P, no .357.
The only .38+P I had on hand was Federal Nyclad and since they're not making it anymore, I didn't shoot any +P this time.
The trigger was very smooth in practice and recoil was very manageable. The ported barrel really does reduce muzzle flip. I had a S&W 642 8 years ago and the recoil on the Taurus is a fair amount easier to handle due to the porting. The 850 CIA looks almost exactly like S&W 442/642 as far as I can tell. I could see a brief flash from the ports as I fired but it did not interfere in any way, was not blinding although I obviously wasn't shooting in the dark.
I haven't shot any of my revolvers in awhile but I surprised myself with my accuracy. I moved the target out to 45 feet and had some decent groups, for me anyway. I didn't stage the trigger, just pulled it smoothly. It was easy to keep it on target. I had done a bit a dry firing before hand and that helped.
Very pleased with this revolver. It is light (16 ounces) but very manageable to somone who doesn't get to shoot as often as I need/want to. THis is my first Taurus, revolver or otherwise. I have 4 S&W revolvers also - 60, 66, 65 LS and 686.
Here it is:
http://www.taurususa.com/titanium/m850t.html