The Real Hawkeye
member
I agree completely. However, when I was a young man back in the 1980s, I used to load up .38 Special brass with new primers. Then I'd melt down some hard wax in a tin plate to about an inch depth. Then, once it started getting a little firm from cooling, I'd stick in all the primer loaded brass and push down, mouth downwards, of course. This would cut a perfect .357 wax wadcutter for each primed case. Then into the refrigerator. In a few minutes I'd pull them all out and I'd have lots of wax wadcutters I can shoot out of my carry revolver in the house. It will cut right through targets, and knock down tin cans, but will not do too much damage to anything hard in the house. It does hurt quite a bit to be shot by one, though. Not a toy, and should be treated with almost as much caution as a real loaded gun, because you could knock and eye out with it. Lots of fun, but be safe.Dry firing your primary pistol would be more effective. There is nothing like that trigger to simulate firing and proper sight alignment and target acquisition. I would think all you need a is a couple of snap caps and time to practice.