I don't own one of these guns, and I don't plan to, but I am just curious as to why they are designed to also shoot 45 colt cartridges (the Governor maybe shoots 45 ACP too).
Since .410 long guns do indeed have a bore diameter right around .410" inches, wouldn't it make sense to design Judges/Governors to shoot 41 magnum (.410" diameter bullets) or even 44 magnum (.430" diameter bullets) instead of 45 colt (.452" diameter bullets)?
I've thought that maybe they purposely wanted a larger bore so the rifling wouldn't grab the .410 wad/shot cup as securely, possibly resulting in less "slinging" of bird shot and less plastic fouling. But that's totally a guess, and I don't doubt that a better reason may exist.
Anyone know why 45 Colt was chosen?
Since .410 long guns do indeed have a bore diameter right around .410" inches, wouldn't it make sense to design Judges/Governors to shoot 41 magnum (.410" diameter bullets) or even 44 magnum (.430" diameter bullets) instead of 45 colt (.452" diameter bullets)?
I've thought that maybe they purposely wanted a larger bore so the rifling wouldn't grab the .410 wad/shot cup as securely, possibly resulting in less "slinging" of bird shot and less plastic fouling. But that's totally a guess, and I don't doubt that a better reason may exist.
Anyone know why 45 Colt was chosen?