Zendude
Member
32 H&R magnum. I like shooting small snubs and this cartridge doesn’t beat up my wrist.
It's not. I often pondered the 10mm route as its most popular with me in autoloaders. And then it becomes an added separate load in a revolver beast that can easily be beat in case application. 357M to 44M. Besting hot .357 BEs is a bit difficult.10mm.
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With careful handloading (and with the right gun of course) you can make any one of those cartridges you "shoot the most" work well for a variety of "jobs." That applies especially to the 41 Mag, IMO.Different tools for different jobs, Hard to pick a favorite.
Cartridges I shoot the most are 38 SPL, 41 Mag and 45 Colt.
What I shoot the most and what I enjoy shooting the most are almost two different questions. I shoot more .38Spl and .357Mag. than anything else because I really enjoy those two cartridges and the revolvers that shoot them; but, I really enjoy shooting .32S&W Long the most. I can go through a couple of boxes of 100gr. DEWC .32Longs in an afternoon of plinking and never get tired of it. In a top-break revolver, I shoot scores of 77gr. .32S&W's just to watch the black smoke drift away as the cans dance and spinners spin. More fun than the law allows, as the saying goes.If you had to pick your favorite cartridge for a revolver, other than 357, what would it be?
I reload so as long as brass and bullets are available, ammo availability isn’t a concern. I’ve been looking at 327 fed, 41 mag and 44 mag.
LOL!! You had me convinced SOMEBODY made a .223 revolver. These days, I doubt nothing - especially if it's crazy.Well, I feel like a goof. Didn't realize what sub forum this was in.
In that case, .38 special for me. One of my best handguns I ever had was a k38 target, made circa 1950. That was one of the handguns stolen from me several years ago, and never got replaced. I do have a nice k22 that scratches the same itch however.
I think there were a very few Taurus Raging 223 revolvers sold. Bottlenecks push back and lock up the cylinder with friction between the case head and the frame. It sounds cool enough to try, but nobody has really engineered around it so I would be inclined to pass on such a revolver, unless it was super cheap, and only then to sell to some collector that just had to have it.LOL!! You had me convinced SOMEBODY made a .223 revolver. These days, I doubt nothing - especially if it's crazy.
Ignore previous post.
That's NOT the case with all bottlenecks, my 25/20 Winchester chambered S&W "K" frame works perfectly.Bottlenecks push back and lock up the cylinder with friction between the case head and the frame. It sounds cool enough to try, but nobody has really engineered around it so I would be inclined to pass on such a revolver,