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#5
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Well...I had a little time on Saturday to sneak off to the range with the new member of my "family" for a little bonding time!
![]() Although this gun is manufactured by Uberti, the fit and finish was definately a notch above the standard Uberti offerings. Perhaps the new Beretta nameplate ensures a bit more on the QC side. I have been eyeing some of the Cattleman SA six guns for a little while before stumbling unto the Stampedes. Around in my neck of the woods, the Stampedes were in the same ballpark as the nicer Ruger's. I am a Ruger fan and know the strength of their frames and barrels owning GP-100's and SP101's. Still though, the Beretta felt a little better in the hand. I began shooting Winchester .38 special cowboy loads in 130 gr, smokeless flavors and found immediately that this little revolver shoots well to point of aim, which made me very happy. I don't shoot nearly as often as I used to ![]() Shooting single handed opened the groups up but wasn't at all extreme. This was a fun and very comfortable revolver to shoot. I of course, had to "spice things up" some and began feeding some of the larger .357 magnum loads in 110gr, 125 gr., and 158 gr. offerings and came to a couple of distict conclusions that I am happy to share! ![]() ![]() This revolver was purchased mainly as a fun plinker that I could shoot both 38 and .357 loads with but also use in SASS in the future. There were no hang-ups or ejector problems either. The larger loads definately rocked the frame though. The cylinder lock-up remains very tight and rotates to each chamber with an audible click and feel of a well tuned watch. I enjoyed the single action very much and actually found myself concentrating a bit more between the ejecting and loading process. I will probably stick with .38 offerings or light .357 's for my set-up but was overall very pleased at this revolver's performance. I would reccmmend a longer barrel to those that may want to shoot hotter .357 magnum loads consistently. ![]() |
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