Maybe some cleaning on the grips, they looked extremely good. Better than the ones that where made in this video. That was a lot of work for a wall hanger, it will never be anything else, not even a museum piece. There are easier ways to make new grips, in this case leaving them alone, I think would have been best. But at least it was saved from the scrap pile. That is the best part.
Hello. I had a similar restoration project. I found an old civil war Remington New Model Army revolver frame, hammer and barrel along with some internal parts at an antique store for $45. Someone had already removed all the rust when I got it. I fit a Uberti NMA cylinder, bolt, and spring kit as well as a Pietta NMA hammer, hand, base pin and loading lever...and timed the action! I then antiqued the bare steel with a combination of Plum Brown and Super Blue solutions. I finished it up last fall and took it out shooting! Everything works perfectly...and it shoots pretty well despite its heavily pitted barrel. It was originally built in 1863 according to its serial number. I bet it hadn't been fired in more than a hundred years...until last fall that is! It felt great to get the old war horse up and running again.
Could you explain the difference to a newbie? I'm fascinated by the way old weapons tell the story of human history -- I'd think conserving a gun that was unique to its time and place is more important than making it "like new" again. How do gun historians trace the provenance of a gun? Can its past be preserved while putting it back in peak (or at least better) condition? My father came home from WWII with a chrome luger he said he'd bought off a German "soldier". I later learned that chrome lugers were only issued to Nazi officers, but by that time Dad was deep into dementia and that gun's particular story was lost.
That is marvelous how you restored that old pistol to working order. It looks much better than before but I didn't think it would fire again. Now it works like a charm. Excellent work.
It’s always nice to see these guns get some attention. I have a 9mm that I got into firing condition. HLE books has cartridge loading kits to save you from having to make your own cases.
Good video, was fun to watch, making 7mm pinfire cartridge is really finicky compared to 12mm ones , but I’ve done it on both calibers, you should make some blank cartridge for that bad boy, the hardware on the grips is not my cup of tea, restore the old grips and put them back on lol
Wow the revolver I got from my grandpa looks a lot like that one the trigger is different on mine also mine has a triggergaurd and on the grip it hat a ring on mine
@Thor555555 I can find lots of images on Google almost like mine only mine also has sights on it that aren't like the ones I saw that looked like mine
There weren't many cartridge loading pistols around in 1850, was it later converted into a cartridge gun, I know they did a lot of that in the 1860's and 70"s,
The pinfire metallic cartridge was Invented by Frenchman Casimir Lefaucheux in 1832, but not patented until 1835, it was one of the earliest practical designs of a metallic cartridge to hasten the loading and firing process of a firearm.
Vincent van gogh was killed by two teenagers, he don't comitted suicide, he was an amazing painter with phyco problems, a shame , his legacy is for the humanity
That speculation has been debunked; van Gogh shot himself and died 30 hours later. Both the attending doctor and the artist's brother Theo knew death was by suicide.
Is pitting on metal like wrinkles and lines on aging faces? Should pitting be removed or celebrated as a life well-lived? Human history is written in guns and swords; are we making a mistake when we attempt to remove the "scars and arrows of outrageous fortune"?
Io le guancette le avrei prima tagliate col il seghetto per poi sgrossarle con la carteggiatrice. Meglio ancora, lasciare le sue originali. Comunque, ben fatto, ottimo lavoro. Complimenti.
A lot of effort put in to this guns slow destruction. Sadly what was wrong with the original Ebony grips? And if you wanted to replace them Walnut is more in keeping with the crap you spent so much time making, The original finish on these guns was Nickle no bluing was used at all. There is a saying here in Britain "Warts and All! meaning the gun should have just been cleaned up by neutralising the rust and left as is because what you have done is robed the gun of its life's history and turned it into a worthless piece of shining metal sadly.
Were you planning on buying the gun before the restoration? If not, why does it matter so much? Once you purchase something, it becomes yours and its value is determined by the person who owns it. For the person in the video, it’s their possession to do what they please with it. Your anger about this and your very negative view of the creators actions reflect your jealousy of their possessions and your obvious attachment issues with objects and their relationship to events in history or your own life. I struggle with a similar mindset, but I have been learning to let go of those types of thoughts. Recently I was on the hunt for a nice spoon and the only ones available at local stores were cheaply made and plastic, I wanted metal with a wooden handle. I decided to hit the local antique emporium and I sought out such a spoon, I found and purchased one that seemed cool and special and fit my wants and needs. When I got home I promptly disassembled and refinished the original parts. I didn’t like the handle itself but I respected the “business end” of the spoon (I.e. the scooping part). I discarded the original handle and carved my own to fit my hand, it was nothing like the original. I did a fine job and was proud of the final product, which I displayed to loved ones and was met with congratulations and praise at the handiwork, but then I was also met with the similar statements you’ve made here. My point is, what I did to the spoon and what this person did here is similar in that “It’s my f*ck!n spoon, I’ll do what I please”.
@@ElliottCoker Well you do have a very small mind set regarding the worlds Antiques because they can only be original once. Being guided by you it would be perfectly correct in your view to give the Sistine Chapel paintings of Michelangelo a couple of coats of white emulsion paint because it's owner would prefer a more colourful appetence. I do not have to purchase one of these Belgian made revolvers because I already own one with all it's life given blemishes and it looks as it should for its age. Finally one can not be jealous of a Moron, or the obvious incorrect opinions of the small minded who just want to add their moronic opinions for effect.
@@ElliottCoker That is the point this person did not create the revolver he vandalised it by removing every trace of its age past life history making it worthless in every way for future generations. Remember we are only custodians of historic objects, it is not a God given right to destroy them at a whim whether we own them or not.. "Class Act" that is a may be! But In Britain we give all our children a very wide World history Education that I am a product of, mot history that just rotates around the White House. Fact the first White house was painted white because the British set it on fire and the name has stuck like the paint.
Finding this in the ground....., fake!! The wood grips wiuld be gone and it would be a lot more rusty! How do i know? Because ive hunted relics for 45 years now, thats how!
Well, if this was the very gun that Van Gogh used to end himself, you would have ruined it by removing the patina and treating it the way you did, but thankfully I read your comments in the lower section and this is NOT the gun Van Gogh used to commit su***de. it just happens to be the same make of revolver he used. Please be clear on what you say, because your subtitles made it sound like this was the very gun he used, and I doubt that you guys would be able to afford the real gun he used, if it is even available to own. there would be no way a person who would have paid literally millions of dollars for Van Gogh's pistol would treat the gun the way you did to this example. the gun is far more valuable to people when it shows the age of the steel anf the wear of the grips and the pitting of the metal. making a gun shiny is not restoring it but ruining it. and then you ruined the original wood grips of the gun by spray painting over it to make a reproduction, tell me, wouldn't a pencil been just fine to trace around the original grips? You Guys are HACKS!
When I was about five, I used to think the gun fired the whole cartridge out of the barrel, like in the thumbnail. Everything in the intro is also a lie.
Я тоже восстанавливаю револьвер Лефоше . Только у меня центральный бой . Твоя работа меня огорчила . Ты не показал ,что барабанчик не может вращаться . На собачке отгнившая полоска пружинки . Поэтому собачка не входит в зацепление с храповиком и не проворачивает барабан . Возле спускового крючка нет крышечки . Деревянные накладки изготовленные тобой ---- полное говно . Они испахабили вид револьвера .
Did I miss the restorer cleaning up the barrel's interior? If the little gun is going to be fired I'd think the barrel's "insides" would have received serious attention...
@@Thor555555 Agreed! You'd need to make your own loads. Another concern is how well the cylinder lines up with the barrel when the trigger is pulled. That poor gun has had a rough life -- I'd want a serious gunsmith to go over it with an engineer's eye before pulling the trigger and trusting I'll still have a working hand after it fires.
Nice job , but would of not made new wooden grips, as not only did I feel that it was unnecessary labour, but detracted from the finished job of restoration , only my opinion of course !
Not sure what that grey paste did but you definitely did not leave it on there for a day 😂 if you wanted to fool your viewers, you should have changed your gloves
Pryvit, JSN, ya Dmytro, ukrayinetsʹ bez istoriyi. U mene pytannya shchodo pistoleta, chy bude vin teper vykorystanyy dlya vbyvstva Putina? Meni duzhe spodobayetʹsya!!! a v inshomu duzhe harne video!! pravylʹnyy shlyakh
how is it save tho claim, the gunt in the museum was van goghs? they don´t have a serialnumber and the gun doesn´t look stored well or seriously after his suezide. So how can it be proved that it was his?
i dont think it will ever fire "apart from the difficulty actually getting 7mm pinfire ammo for it" for a start the hand spring was and still is broken so the cylinder wont engage the next round, it wont revolve.
A 170-year-old gun is NOT ANTIQUE. It´s old, yes, but antique is something entirely different. And, with all due respect, I don´t like the result of your work.
bien d'accord avec toi, les plaquettes mal ajustées, pas d'encastrement dans la carcasse, sans parler de la vis de fixation. le ressort du doigt élévateur pas refait, vis remplacée par un simple bout de feraille sans filetage monter en force, bref, du bricolage pour un resultat passable. bon, ca reste un ELG fabriqué par wagon donc pas de "sacrillège" MDR
😂😂😂 è interessante il fatto che un revolver a spillo, sistema Lefaucheux, sia capace di lanciare una cartuccia .45 Auto COMPRESA DI BOSSOLO.....😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Sorry to say it looked better before. All I would have done was to clean it up a little.
Maybe some cleaning on the grips, they looked extremely good. Better than the ones that where made in this video. That was a lot of work for a wall hanger, it will never be anything else, not even a museum piece. There are easier ways to make new grips, in this case leaving them alone, I think would have been best. But at least it was saved from the scrap pile. That is the best part.
Hello. I had a similar restoration project. I found an old civil war Remington New Model Army revolver frame, hammer and barrel along with some internal parts at an antique store for $45. Someone had already removed all the rust when I got it. I fit a Uberti NMA cylinder, bolt, and spring kit as well as a Pietta NMA hammer, hand, base pin and loading lever...and timed the action! I then antiqued the bare steel with a combination of Plum Brown and Super Blue solutions. I finished it up last fall and took it out shooting! Everything works perfectly...and it shoots pretty well despite its heavily pitted barrel. It was originally built in 1863 according to its serial number. I bet it hadn't been fired in more than a hundred years...until last fall that is! It felt great to get the old war horse up and running again.
Would rather it be conserved than restored.
Could you explain the difference to a newbie?
I'm fascinated by the way old weapons tell the story of human history -- I'd think conserving a gun that was unique to its time and place is more important than making it "like new" again.
How do gun historians trace the provenance of a gun? Can its past be preserved while putting it back in peak (or at least better) condition?
My father came home from WWII with a chrome luger he said he'd bought off a German "soldier". I later learned that chrome lugers were only issued to Nazi officers, but by that time Dad was deep into dementia and that gun's particular story was lost.
That is marvelous how you restored that old pistol to working order. It looks much better than before but I didn't think it would fire again. Now it works like a charm. Excellent work.
Thank you so much for your comment😃
After all the work the Pakistanis went through to make it look old?
@@jaytalbot1146 whaaat🤣
Using vinegar and steel wool to create a blackening solution for wood is very interesting! Learned something new! Thanks!
Thanks to you :)
Work great on veg tan leather as well it will instantly turn a rich deep black
@@Darthmental-g4t Thanks for the tip!!
very nice restoration
one day you will become best youtuber
may allah give you more success in this world and in the hereafter
(AMEEN)❤❤🤲😊
Your comment makes me very happy!! Your work is quality too! Thank you so much
allah 😂😂
Love anything restored great job
Thank you :))
The gun is worthless now.
Thanks !
Why Don t you leave the original worden Grips, as far i See there was no big failure.
Really?NO,not with this brutality,and the wire wheel,ye Gods,what were you thinking?
It’s always nice to see these guns get some attention. I have a 9mm that I got into firing condition. HLE books has cartridge loading kits to save you from having to make your own cases.
Thanks for the information🙂
The whole process is really amazing!!! Love it. Cant wait for your next video.
@@1RestorationChannel Thanks :)
Nice job!
Good video, was fun to watch, making 7mm pinfire cartridge is really finicky compared to 12mm ones , but I’ve done it on both calibers, you should make some blank cartridge for that bad boy, the hardware on the grips is not my cup of tea, restore the old grips and put them back on lol
Thanks :)
Perhaps you might have made the new grips out of pink or red plastic?
With glitter... can't forget the sparkly glitter!
🤷🏻♂️🤣
Now it looks like a lump of silver "tat" !
Thanks ;)
Verry good, its amazing !! ❤❤❤
Thanks bro!❤️
Ich finde,das hochglanzpolierte Rostnarben-Finisch sehr schön 🙂
Te felicito, eres un artista, has convertido un hierro viejo en una joyita. Saludos
Grazie per il tuo commento✌🏻😊
Parabéns pelo caprichoso trabalho
130 років, пістолет наче вчора впав.. Оце контент! Оце подача!
Dope AF results, @JSNRestoration!
Wow! I also found a junk gun in a pile of garden shop compost
THANKS! what is a model?
Good job bro 👌
Thanks bro🫶🏻
Sorry but Ilike it before restoring.
He absolutely destroyed it
Thumbnail be like
We fire the whole bullet, that 60% more bullet per bullet.
Wow the revolver I got from my grandpa looks a lot like that one the trigger is different on mine also mine has a triggergaurd and on the grip it hat a ring on mine
seems they were made in different ways in small series.
I know one without the triggerguard like this one but also with a ring on the grip.
@Thor555555 I can find lots of images on Google almost like mine only mine also has sights on it that aren't like the ones I saw that looked like mine
Magnifique vidéo
Merci mon ami❤️
That gun might have had historical value before you touched it but not anymore.
Good job! 👍
Thanks 😃
There weren't many cartridge loading pistols around in 1850, was it later converted into a cartridge gun, I know they did a lot of that in the 1860's and 70"s,
The pinfire metallic cartridge was Invented by Frenchman Casimir Lefaucheux in 1832, but not patented until 1835, it was one of the earliest practical designs of a metallic cartridge to hasten the loading and firing process of a firearm.
Good experience about restorb weapon
Thank you :)
Bravo !!!!!
Very nice work I love it !! It has its age but still looks AMAZING !! 👍👍
Thank you very much! :)
Vincent van gogh was killed by two teenagers, he don't comitted suicide, he was an amazing painter with phyco problems, a shame , his legacy is for the humanity
That speculation has been debunked; van Gogh shot himself and died 30 hours later. Both the attending doctor and the artist's brother Theo knew death was by suicide.
A GREAT MAN
For all that labor n hard work I can see on the internal parts but the exterior still looks like hell with all the pitting ???
Is pitting on metal like wrinkles and lines on aging faces? Should pitting be removed or celebrated as a life well-lived? Human history is written in guns and swords; are we making a mistake when we attempt to remove the "scars and arrows of outrageous fortune"?
Muy mal. Le has quitado todo el valor a esa pistola. Ahora no vale nada. Qué pena
How to destroy a weapon... Are you serious?
Io le guancette le avrei prima tagliate col il seghetto per poi sgrossarle con la carteggiatrice. Meglio ancora, lasciare le sue originali. Comunque, ben fatto, ottimo lavoro. Complimenti.
Grazie :)
A lot of effort put in to this guns slow destruction. Sadly what was wrong with the original Ebony grips? And if you wanted to replace them Walnut is more in keeping with the crap you spent so much time making, The original finish on these guns was Nickle no bluing was used at all. There is a saying here in Britain "Warts and All! meaning the gun should have just been cleaned up by neutralising the rust and left as is because what you have done is robed the gun of its life's history and turned it into a worthless piece of shining metal sadly.
Check out Mark Novak on here. I've been binge watching his stuff. He does a good job.
Were you planning on buying the gun before the restoration? If not, why does it matter so much? Once you purchase something, it becomes yours and its value is determined by the person who owns it. For the person in the video, it’s their possession to do what they please with it. Your anger about this and your very negative view of the creators actions reflect your jealousy of their possessions and your obvious attachment issues with objects and their relationship to events in history or your own life. I struggle with a similar mindset, but I have been learning to let go of those types of thoughts.
Recently I was on the hunt for a nice spoon and the only ones available at local stores were cheaply made and plastic, I wanted metal with a wooden handle. I decided to hit the local antique emporium and I sought out such a spoon, I found and purchased one that seemed cool and special and fit my wants and needs. When I got home I promptly disassembled and refinished the original parts. I didn’t like the handle itself but I respected the “business end” of the spoon (I.e. the scooping part). I discarded the original handle and carved my own to fit my hand, it was nothing like the original. I did a fine job and was proud of the final product, which I displayed to loved ones and was met with congratulations and praise at the handiwork, but then I was also met with the similar statements you’ve made here. My point is, what I did to the spoon and what this person did here is similar in that “It’s my f*ck!n spoon, I’ll do what I please”.
@@ElliottCoker Well you do have a very small mind set regarding the worlds Antiques because they can only be original once. Being guided by you it would be perfectly correct in your view to give the Sistine Chapel paintings of Michelangelo a couple of coats of white emulsion paint because it's owner would prefer a more colourful appetence. I do not have to purchase one of these Belgian made revolvers because I already own one with all it's life given blemishes and it looks as it should for its age. Finally one can not be jealous of a Moron, or the obvious incorrect opinions of the small minded who just want to add their moronic opinions for effect.
@@jas20per I’m small minded because I don’t belittle people for their creations and restorations. You are a class act. I bet you’re fun at parties.
@@ElliottCoker That is the point this person did not create the revolver he vandalised it by removing every trace of its age past life history making it worthless in every way for future generations. Remember we are only custodians of historic objects, it is not a God given right to destroy them at a whim whether we own them or not.. "Class Act" that is a may be! But In Britain we give all our children a very wide World history Education that I am a product of, mot history that just rotates around the White House. Fact the first White house was painted white because the British set it on fire and the name has stuck like the paint.
Finding this in the ground....., fake!! The wood grips wiuld be gone and it would be a lot more rusty! How do i know? Because ive hunted relics for 45 years now, thats how!
Good! It’s for the show🤣
Parece que el arma original estaba pavonada.Ese pulido brillante,a espejo....no parece buena idea.Pero buena y cincienzuda limpieza,eso si.😊
good idea :)
Tutorial di come rovinare una splendida revolver 1850 !!
Well, if this was the very gun that Van Gogh used to end himself, you would have ruined it by removing the patina and treating it the way you did, but thankfully I read your comments in the lower section and this is NOT the gun Van Gogh used to commit su***de. it just happens to be the same make of revolver he used. Please be clear on what you say, because your subtitles made it sound like this was the very gun he used, and I doubt that you guys would be able to afford the real gun he used, if it is even available to own. there would be no way a person who would have paid literally millions of dollars for Van Gogh's pistol would treat the gun the way you did to this example. the gun is far more valuable to people when it shows the age of the steel anf the wear of the grips and the pitting of the metal. making a gun shiny is not restoring it but ruining it. and then you ruined the original wood grips of the gun by spray painting over it to make a reproduction, tell me, wouldn't a pencil been just fine to trace around the original grips? You Guys are HACKS!
Thanks ! :)
Pin fire guns are very hard to find ammo for so in my case after restoring it it will go on display till I find proper ammo
That's right 😃
I think the fine glass bead in the sand blast box method is better than this approach.
When I was about five, I used to think the gun fired the whole cartridge out of the barrel, like in the thumbnail.
Everything in the intro is also a lie.
🥶🥶
Ich frage mich nur , ob die Antike bis 1850 ging😆
Ist immer lustig wenn bei einem 45er Schwarzpulverrevolver komplette 9mm para Patronen fliegen. Nur mal so.😂
Well done my friend. But you need to invest in some wood working tools, save time and material.
Thanks, it's in progress :)
Auf dem Foto fliegt ja eine ganze PATRONE aus dem Kauf...
🤣
To think; a 7mm Lefaucheux pinfire revolver ended Van Gogh.
Я тоже восстанавливаю револьвер Лефоше . Только у меня центральный бой .
Твоя работа меня огорчила .
Ты не показал ,что барабанчик не может вращаться . На собачке отгнившая полоска пружинки . Поэтому собачка не входит в зацепление с храповиком и не проворачивает барабан .
Возле спускового крючка нет крышечки .
Деревянные накладки изготовленные тобой ---- полное говно . Они испахабили вид револьвера .
Thanks!
Did I miss the restorer cleaning up the barrel's interior? If the little gun is going to be fired I'd think the barrel's "insides" would have received serious attention...
would be very difficult to get ammunition for this revolver
@@Thor555555 Agreed! You'd need to make your own loads.
Another concern is how well the cylinder lines up with the barrel when the trigger is pulled. That poor gun has had a rough life -- I'd want a serious gunsmith to go over it with an engineer's eye before pulling the trigger and trusting I'll still have a working hand after it fires.
ALL parts have to be blued !!!
There's a theory that two boys accidentally shot him.
Pinfire? Did you make your own cartridges?
Nice job , but would of not made new wooden grips, as not only did I feel that it was unnecessary labour, but detracted from the finished job of restoration , only my opinion of course !
Esta Muy bien mostrado los de talles del vídeo
I call bull crap, if that was his gun it would be in a museum.
Not sure what that grey paste did but you definitely did not leave it on there for a day 😂 if you wanted to fool your viewers, you should have changed your gloves
IMHO you have to keep the originals wooden grips
ເບື່ງ
MAS DE QUANDO E ESSE VIDEO ?
Where the bullets?
He died while painting sunflowers and that is certainly not his gun. That gun would be a rusted seized up relic if it was dug up from the ground.
Pryvit, JSN, ya Dmytro, ukrayinetsʹ bez istoriyi. U mene pytannya shchodo pistoleta, chy bude vin teper vykorystanyy dlya vbyvstva Putina? Meni duzhe spodobayetʹsya!!! a v inshomu duzhe harne video!! pravylʹnyy shlyakh
Amazing,170 year old gun just laying there covered in cow shit. !!!
🤣🤣🤣
Wow. Now it's more beautiful to put in the trash
Thanks 😂
I hope that wasn't Van Gogh's actual suicide gun.
Why not ?😏
Piacere di conoscerti!ma devo dirti una cosa che...io ti ammiro x il lavoro fatto però adesso il valore che aveva prima.non l'ha più,scusi eh...😢😢😢
😰😰
Jay Leno has ruined many classic cars by restoring cars that did not need it. Just like this gun. Patina is what everyone is looking for now.
how is it save tho claim, the gunt in the museum was van goghs?
they don´t have a serialnumber and the gun doesn´t look stored well or seriously after his suezide.
So how can it be proved that it was his?
It’s a prank
it's the same model, not the real weapon
A rusted antique gun has some value. A highly polished antique gun has no collector
value at all. Some things are better left as they are.
Thanks for the comment. :)
LA FAFUCIER.
I think you better call this a “restoration” (def using the quotation marks).
Que gran esfuerzo en cargarte una antigüedad, lastima
Que lastima que no supo conservar las cachas que probablemente eran de madera de ébano.......
This is not how you restore a gun. As soon as you see a wire brush you know it’s not a professional restoration.
Você passa a pasta e não dis qual é antes de montar a peça
Sad on grips and shoul have blued whole gun
You plan to actually fire it?
i dont think it will ever fire "apart from the difficulty actually getting 7mm pinfire ammo for it" for a start the hand spring was and still is broken so the cylinder wont engage the next round, it wont revolve.
Mano, vc deixa muito a desejar sem informações. Vlw. Fica na paz
What a mess up. Absolutely destroyed its value.
Thanks😭
Should of just cleaned it, and kept the original handles.
You destroyed its antique value...what a shame.
the guns like a potatoes
Pinfire ?
A 170-year-old gun is NOT ANTIQUE. It´s old, yes, but antique is something entirely different. And, with all due respect, I don´t like the result of your work.
@@donfredo8013 I understand, would you have done it in my place?
NOT restoration but butchery ! Amateur ! You should have seen how GUNSMITHS do it PROPERLY !
Not much if any historical value left a wall hanger a careful cleaning would have been sufficient
You don’t have a clue. Stay away from antique weapons.
Clean it up and put it away
7ໂມ່ງ
Gun destroyed. you did all that cant do to an old gun...Is a very bad restauration!! Fuf.
Pas Lefaucheux, modèle liégeois, belge. Restauration dégradante. Dommage.
bien d'accord avec toi, les plaquettes mal ajustées, pas d'encastrement dans la carcasse, sans parler de la vis de fixation. le ressort du doigt élévateur pas refait, vis remplacée par un simple bout de feraille sans filetage monter en force, bref, du bricolage pour un resultat passable. bon, ca reste un ELG fabriqué par wagon donc pas de "sacrillège" MDR
The bullet does not come with the case and all out of the bore.The exhibited opening icon is nonsense...😝
@@alexandrosfotiou3589 🤡🤡
@@JSNRestoration 🤗
😂😂😂 è interessante il fatto che un revolver a spillo, sistema Lefaucheux, sia capace di lanciare una cartuccia .45 Auto COMPRESA DI BOSSOLO.....😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
U took every penny it was worth nd destroyed it I'm sorry I found this channel
Thank you very mush😁
horse hockey
A lot of nonsense in this video. Quite annoying.