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Blued SS or stainless ST. Similar price similar condition. Which one should I buy?
Single 10 if you only will ever shoot 22 LR. Single six if you want to shoot both 22 LR and 22 Mag. Single 9 if you only want to shoot 22 Mag.
I have always been satisfied with Single Sixes. It's quick enough to load and shoot six,, I don't need to go through ammo any faster than that.
Blued SS or stainless ST. Similar price similar condition. Which one should I buy?
I would definitely go stainless, usually they're $50 more than blued and the extra 4 shots is a definite bonus!Blued SS or stainless ST. Similar price similar condition. Which one should I buy?
I'm also not a fan of the cylinder of the Single Ten either.
If you have no hangups about that, the 10 shot capability is actually kind of nice. Divides well with most common ammo counts. Load up once, and you're probably good for that whole fishing trip
Nostalgia and dreams of western duels aside, one thing's for sure: if you were to ask a cowboy, a pioneer homesteader or a Dodge City lawman back in their time, when outlaws and rustlers mocked the law, when feeding ones' family wasn't sport but survival and Indians were collecting pale-face scalps, which of the two pistols do you think they'd choose?
OK, find what sings to you the loudest and grab it!
Well, actually a cowboy or a Dodge City lawman would have no use for either revolver, since they are chambered in .22 rimfire cartridges.
The question was which .22 rimfire revolver should I buy, "Single Six or Single Ten", which is why I asked "Which of the two pistols do you think they (people living in the time) might choose" if that was their only option?
Nostalgia and dreams of western duels aside, one thing's for sure: if you were to ask a cowboy, a pioneer homesteader or a Dodge City lawman back in their time, when outlaws and rustlers mocked the law, when feeding ones' family wasn't sport but survival and Indians were collecting pale-face scalps, which of the two pistols do you think they'd choose?