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Remington 1858 New Army with Howell Conversion Cylinder
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- Опубліковано 21 гру 2020
- Taking a look at my black powder Remington 1858 New Army (Pietta reproduction) wirh a Howell Arms 45 Colt conversion cylinder.
I ordered me an Uberti 1858 Remington style new model army .44 caliber revolver online from Dixie gun works recently and a Howell .45 colt fluted 6 shot cartridge conversion cylinder online from midway USA. Received them both 2 weeks ago and made an unboxing video and posted it on my channel. 2 days later I drove 275 miles to the Cabela’s outlet in Hamburg PA. to score me their last 2 boxes of HSM .45 colt 200 grain cowboy load cartridges. I’m very pleased with it
Howell marks the cylinder and is entirely blued. Taylor does not Mark the cylinder U or P, the grooves to rotate the cylinder are not blued. Also Howell makes a notch to keep the hammer in-between the pins, so as to not fire accidently.
This guy in the video is fairly ignorant and dont really know much about what he is talking about.
The 1858 nomenclature, is in reference to the patent for the notch in the loading lever.
The reason for them calling those revolvers 44 caliber is back then they were measuring the lands not the bore groove diameter.
The same is true of the 36 caliber cap n ball pistols. They used .375 to .380 balls or conical slugs, but the bore was .357 to .358.
I always thought it was because they started with a .45 bullet and the ring of lead that pops out when you stuff the bullet in makes it a .44?
Good video, Merry Christmas
I realize I'm kinda off topic but do anyone know of a good website to stream newly released movies online ?
@Uriel Grant i would suggest Flixzone. You can find it on google :)
Just ordered the .45acp cylinder for the pietta 1858 bison w/12' barrel.I can't wait to get some lead nose ammo and do some plinking.
*Nice video* as have dealt w/ the very same setup like you got there~>have 2 Howell Arms stainless cylinders here: one in .45 Colt other in .45 ACP. & use Cowboy LEAD loads like back in the 1800s. BTW, all Howell .45 Colt conversion cylinders have 1 safety notch (not 6) for the Bolt to engage the extra out-of-place notch you see close to a regular outside notch.
The only thing I see besides the six chamber notches with firing pins, is the hole for the alignment pin.
I posted a video on my channel recently of my most recent shooting session shooting an 8 inch terra cotta flower pot from about 30 feet away with my Uberti 1858 new model army revolver shooting Winchester super X .45 Colt 250 grain cowboy loads using my Howell .45 Colt cylinder
Are the firing pins on the rear part of the cylinder spring loaded or do they just kind of free float
Hey does your hammer screw slowly unloosen with every cock back and fire? Like slowly unscrew outward? Is that normal. Is this a major defect or am I supposed to add something to the threads
Do you dry fire with the snap-caps?
Hello, please I need an info. I have a muzzleloading Remington Uberti 1858 reverver and would like to make it 45 colt or 45 acp. Should you can buy a tambuto of one of these calibts, how much does it cost? Thank you
Best regard from Italy
I think you would have to buy it from the US.
Tienes que comprarlos en los Estados Unidos.
Yo también quiéro hacér lol mísmo. Yo voy a investigár lo que cuésta y te mándo la información.
Gío.
So what you said was that you did not film the whole video. You practice once first.
Would this work with a brass frame
Not safely. The manufacturer of the conversion cylinder says not to. Only steel frames. The brass is a little to soft
Not brass
No very dangerous only steel
Try buying ammo
Kirst is better IMO
Wolff makes a lightened spring.
It is but you have to modify the gun
Ok, it came out in 1858, hence the name. Not 1860s what ever. Those revolvers are quick to reload with paper cartridges, and the 1858 Remington had the advantage of speed loading over the colt with multiple cylinder swapping. Your over all knowledge of this video content is ... lacking to say the least. Spend more time reading history books and doing better research before making a video.