What keeps a .454 Casull out of a .410 gun?

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If a .454 would fit in a Judge (or hand grenade with that load), it would be an even more potent hand grenade with a .460 Magnum. A .460 Mag surely couldn't be too long, as the Judge (or S&W Governor) chamber has to be long enough to at least fit .410 shells that are all longer than even the 2.25" .460 cartridge.

Of course, some Darwin award winner would try Buffalo Bore .45 Colts in his Judge/Governor. Failing to realize they're loaded so hot as to top standard factory .44 Mag loads, and would turn anything not made for .454 and/or .460 into a hand grenade.

How has Taurus managed to not be sued out of business by stupid Americans? .357 Mag was intentionally made too long to fit in a .38 Special revolver back in the early 1930s, before we entered a world where the brain dead could sue over everything.

After all, we live in a world where a fan I recently bought actually warned that is was not for use in or under water. Oh, damn, how is one supposed to keep their pool cool with a fan that's not for underwater use? Well, guess I'll just sit in the spa & make some toast.:)
 
Google search on "Suing firearm manufacturers"

I read through a lot of this search, and I do not see anything about 454 Casull ammo in a 410 shotgun.

I guess it is up to the consumer to know which 410s can take it.

That video in the thread where 454 ammo would not blow up a 410, so they used floor sweepings powder and blew the chamber. That test may have had and independent variable out of control;)
 
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