Excellent, thorough, and interestesting presentation as always . Over a ton of knock down power in a revolver. Simply amazing... The 45-70, .500, 460 calibers are expensive at around $2/rd but the .350 Legend is .65 cents/round. In the 30-30 and 45-70 it should be a major seller for hunters with the BFR etc..Trying to decide on a caliber. Collector, range, and hunting use. We love this stuff.
Would love to get a 454 or 460 revolver and sbr it. If I could get ahold of 1 with a 14-16 inch barrel I would carve a wooden stock to replace the grips with. Depending on the barrel length, I may or may not need a tax stamp.
With the Raging Hunter 460 you cannot only shoot 460 S&W magnum but also chamber and safely fire 454 Casull and 45 Colt and even 45 Schofield. Even 45 Autorim can be shot. Cleaning the chambers is mandatory when doing so with the shorter cartridges.
@@southtownsjoe3309 you are wrong sir. I own a model 460V S&W magnum X-frame revolver and I have shot 45 Colt and 454 Casull in mine. Buy one and try it. If it has a rim on the cartridge and is of the same caliber but shorter it will chamber and fire. Just keep the chambers cleaned after using shorter cartridges as the carbon build up can make chambering the 460 S&W magnum cartridge hard to insert and fully seat and also eject.
@@jeffreylocke8808 thanks for your reply, I do own one & many more, that's why I took the time to warn other shooters on false hype.....of course the mentioned sub-calibers can be inserted & go bang, but considering the incredible "bullet jump" from case to throat distance, accuracy is crap at any distance past 5yds.....stay with .460 case only, have fun & 2A forever!
@@southtownsjoe3309 mine shoots 454 Casull accurately but 45 Long Colt is minute of three inches at 50 yards. Good enough for a close deer... Heavy Long Colt shoots to aim better though.
I do not want to be the one that says manner - Nana, but I just went and looked and I have a case of Hornady 200 green loaded ammunition for the 460 Smith and Wesson magnum. I picked it up when I got my then new 460 Smith. I guess a have the equal of gold bullion here. Precious metals, I guess so. Thanks for the video
The 460 S&W magnum is the fastest double action revolver cartridge. The 500 Bushwacker from TII Armory is the fastest of all revolvers though, but it is only available in a single action BFR long cylinder. Why? Because the cartridge is too long for the S&W 500 magnum cylinder on their X-frame.
I got a 3.5" smith .460 in October to carry in the woods. I mean, does the Taurus really come close? I got it for bears in Alaska within 15 or so yards, not to hunt with.
I have a question Mr. Bane or one of your viewers. Taurus does not authorize shooting 45 LC or 454 in the 460 Raging Hunter. I have seen it done by many youtubers. Is the reason they don't approve it simply because of the cylinder buildup from the shorter cartridges? Also, Taurus has a lifetime warranty. Would shooting the 45 or 454 void a warranty?
Yes, the shorter cartridges leave a carbon ring that doesn't need to, but really should be cleaned before shooting 460. The 460 has like 65k psi limit, which is stupidly high and the carbon rings will cause the pressure to increase. The more rings there are and the bigger the rings from more ammo being shot, the more severe the pressure spikes. Aside from pressure spikes, it pretty well jams the empty cases in there. If you are going to drop $1k on the gun and spend at least $40 a box of 45 colt, you really should spend a couple hundred $$$ to buy a single stage press and 460 dies. You can load 460 cases to relatively low pressures with Trail Boss powder and get 45 colt performance for half the price of 45 colt. $80 press, $40 dies, $16 200 primers, $30 a # of powder, $40 for 250 lead bullets. That's $206 for your first 200 rounds, which is $50 per box of 50. The next 200 bullets is $80, which is $20 a box. Cheap 9mm factory ammo is like $16.
The only 460 ammo I can find is HSM bear load from my local sportsman's warehouse. It is advertised as 325gr, 1845ft/s. But I honestly think it is loaded far hotter than that. Or at least the 2 boxes I've fired so far are loaded hotter. I won't be shooting my 460 until I can find some different ammo. Not looking to grenade my $950 gun with over-pressure loads.
@@micharlbane i got ahold of some similar specced Underwood ammo and the recoil was literally half what the hsm bear load was. I took the chance and tried some more of the hsm bear load that i bought separately from the first two boxes and they also had much less recoil and no signs of over pressure. So yeah, there was a lot from hsm that was loaded extra hot. Hopefully it was just a one off manufacturing error.
Probably not loaded hotter. Underwood is some notoriously hot ammo, so you're probably getting at or under spec'd ammo. I have some HSM too, and I'd trust it against a bear in anything .44 or higher but its not typically hot at all. You'll still thump pretty hard with the .460 rounds though.
@@kyleritchie50 You weren't paying attention to what I said. Those first two boxes of HSM had over TWICE the recoil of the Underwood and second two boxes of HSM. They also had several signs of over-pressure and jammed my gun up pretty bad on several occasions. They were most definitely defective in some way. Either they were loaded with too much powder, the wrong powder, much too tight of a crimp, or some other mistake, because they were absolutely punishing on me, on the gun, and on their own cases. And HSM doesn't load all of their bear load offerings super hot. I know their 10mm bear load is pretty tame.
@@KurNorock that's completely my bad, I half read it last night (kinda drunk). I'd take that as a win if the .460 is hotter than what's typical though. If you look at their site, it's rated under what underwood offers in a similar format so that's definitely not normal for them.
Id have thought the pressure would be higher than that of the 454 casull, seeing as its a good bit longer and supposed to be a more magnum version of the 454. 454 has a 65000 psi operating pressure.
The 460 is left to primer pressure. It can be bumped up to 75,000. But you have all sorts of risks for straight walled cartridges. What the .460 offers is an all around cartridge. You can use it in a full length rifle or a revolver and almost any 45 caliber round as well. You can use it as a bear round, elephant or whatever you want with the heaviest slugs to the lightest. While 454 is slightly limited in the heavy slug high velocity range. With 454 its a trade off. The 460 is like a 45-120 with smokeless powder. It does everything.
What would you recommend to someone who wants to hunt whitetail with a pistol? But here is the thing the person has a disability on his firing hand so recoil and weight can be a huge issue. What caliber would you recommend? And the gun has to be lethal and accurate out to 100 yards.
Ruger Gp100.. 44 Magnum or even the 357 Mag.. my uncle consistently hits the 10 ring with his Gp 100 357 Mag and had taken whitetail deer with his as well. Don't over look the 357 Mag.. it's been known as the man stopper for good reason. I carry the Sp101 in 357 Mag.. I'd feel comfortable out to fifty yards with it. That's with open sights.
In truth, handgun hunting is all about shot placement, and any of the cartridges typically used can deliver if the shot is placed correctly. White-tailed deer are at the bottom end of the hunting spectrum -- thin-skinned, relatively small. Based on what you're describing, I would go with a .44 Magnum and 240-gr JHP, something like the Hornady XTP, if you can find them. My personal choice would be the Buffalo Bore 240-gr medium cast "Deer Grenades," but they are screamers. Now let's talk about recoil...you cannot have a lighter gun that recoils less. The Taurus Raging Hunter, because of its ports (and weight), and the Colt Anaconda and Ruger Super Redhawk, because if their weight, make shooting the 240-gr loads easy (as, say, compared to a Model 29 or my custom 629 with a titanium cylinder), but they're all over 50 ounces. Let's talk about the 100 yards...all modern revolvers are more accurate then we can shoot them. A 100-yard revolver shot, however, is a serious shot, pretty much my distance limit on game with a red dot or scope on a revolver. If your friend would lessen the distance of his farthest shot to, say 35-50 yards, that would bring the .357 into play; ir, ironically, the 45-70 BFR shooting 405-gr lead loads.
You could easily use a 10mm for that. It has plenty of power and is very flat shooting out to at least 100 yards. It will take any animal in north America and most of the animals in Africa. And it has the added benefit of a large capacity and semi-automatic function for that just-in-case-you-meet-a-bear moment. And it doesn't have as much recoil as the typical 44mag and larger than so many people mistakenly think you need.
The Finnish. That black Finnish on ones I’ve seen seems to easily come off or get scratched. If they would do all stainless or do a blued or something better than that flat black spray pain look they got I believe it would be much better.
Question????? So…. You say the chamber pressure is the same for the 460 and 454. I have a Raging Judge Magnum 454. Would it be safe to have the cylinder re-chambered for the 460 round??????
I like the idea of the 460..... but the idea of the 460 is so stinking similar to the reality of the 45-70.... I'd rather the 45-70 due to its ridiculous versatility. If you have a modern-steel strong action, the 45-70 will get the job done every bit as good (and probably a lot better in heavy bullets) than the 460. Due to the length of case, I consider the 454 Casull to be the more versatile of the three you mentioned. It's not too long, not too big and bulky, not too close to a straight-wall rifle case of yore, you can load at least 10 of them in a tubular mag, it's still working with a true six-shooter in Ruger revolvers. Is 454 Casull really necessary? No. A +p 45 Colt will go end-to-end through a big animal smashing bones on the way.
I do agree with you. Some years back we did load tests on jacked up .45 Colts with hard cast lead bullets, and they penetrate like crazy. The .454 comes into its own on really big and dangerous game. I do agree that the 45-70 out of the BFR platform is a far better cartridge then most people think. Most of the people I talk to think it's sort of a joke giant clown gun, but at FTW Ranch a few year snack chief instructor Doug Prichard and I sat on the bend with several boxes of the Hornady 325-gr Leverevolution round (which, BTW, are clearly marked not for use in revolvers, but, hey, who's counting?) ringing a 200-plate pretty easily with recoil that I would class as "moderate" compared to even a lighter bullet .454 or .500 Magnum.
@@micharlbane Pretty much. Obviously with larger case capacity (in .458 bullets) you can get pretty much equivalent velocity as the short hot rounds, with much less pressure and the recoil impulse will be a progressive shove, rather than a blunt whack. The BFR is also heavy enough to dampen out some of the movement, but I wouldn't say a lot more heavy than a Ruger SRH or an X-frame Smith.
With a .460 you can shoot whatever the fuck you want though (up to .460). The versatility of the chambering is impressive. Same diameter, but longer casing so it throws some serious heat at whatever you don't want to be in front of you. The necessity entirely depends on where you live and what its for. I live in Alaska, and I can probably do well with my .44 but the .460 will ruin anything that wants to mess with my summer sunday hikes.
@@kyleritchie50 Right. But as with anything, you'll have a lot of free-bore between the case and the cylinder throat with a 45 colt (or 45 Schofield even) loaded in a 460 cylinder. Does that matter? It fills with carbon and gunk, so enjoy cleaning that. It's equivalent to shooting 22 long rifle in a 10 pound rifle. What's the point? Buy more than one gun. Most people looking to shoot 460 magnum out of an X-frame or equivalent, are buying it for the 460 capability and probably won't be shooting 45 colt very much. Why? It's a heavy brick and tiny recoil in a heavy brick is sort of silly, when you can have very moderate recoil in a very light handy revolver. I'd much rather plink away with a Ruger Vaquero or Pietta Californian or equivalent chambered in 45 colt than hoisting around a giant massive X-frame with a way-too-long cylinder to shoot the same stuff.
@@exothermal.sprocket It might get a little grubby, but it won't make it less effective (especially when its clean). I clean/lube my guns every time I fire them. More buildup doesn't always equate to more work either. It depends on what you want. I live in Alaska and I went .460 because I'm military and I'll be in the lower 48 eventually. I won't need anything more than .45 +p further down the road, and .460 is perfect while I'm here.
The smith n wessons are expensive. This one msrp’s at 1,000$. For a taurus.. just save up the extra 500$ and buy the smith. The smith holds its value. The taurus wont. Taurus doesnt have the best reputation. The only reason i wont buy one is their capacity. If they can finally have a 6 round .460 revolver. Ill get it. Until then. I may never
Great Video, I subscribed and rang that bell. Does Taurus make a quality revolver? I would like to try one, but I'm leery about Taurus. Currently my only Big Bore is a Lipsey's Edition BFR in .460, but had a .500 BFR in the past. Thanks for any input.
First time watching you and boy this was a great find. So much info and so entertaining, thanks for the info!
Love my 5" 460 Smith and Wesson. Its a smile maker on the range. I shoot more 45 colt and 454. But once I start reloading 460 I'll shoot more of that.
Excellent, thorough, and interestesting presentation as always . Over a ton of knock down power in a revolver. Simply amazing... The 45-70, .500, 460 calibers are expensive at around $2/rd but the .350 Legend is .65 cents/round. In the 30-30 and 45-70 it should be a major seller for hunters with the BFR etc..Trying to decide on a caliber. Collector, range, and hunting use. We love this stuff.
I have Tarsus .454 I bought back in the 90's. I think I just might upgrade it to this .460. Thanks. :)
Thanks Mr. Bane. Great job. Good info.
Good video. Informative and Entertaining!
Would love to get a 454 or 460 revolver and sbr it. If I could get ahold of 1 with a 14-16 inch barrel I would carve a wooden stock to replace the grips with. Depending on the barrel length, I may or may not need a tax stamp.
S&W makes a Performance Center one with a 14" barrel, bipod, and rail you can put an pistol scope on it.
With the Raging Hunter 460 you cannot only shoot 460 S&W magnum but also chamber and safely fire 454 Casull and 45 Colt and even 45 Schofield. Even 45 Autorim can be shot. Cleaning the chambers is mandatory when doing so with the shorter cartridges.
yea, believe more marketing BS. ..that's all crap info, obviously you don't own one or you'd know that, only shoot .460
@@southtownsjoe3309 you are wrong sir. I own a model 460V S&W magnum X-frame revolver and I have shot 45 Colt and 454 Casull in mine. Buy one and try it. If it has a rim on the cartridge and is of the same caliber but shorter it will chamber and fire. Just keep the chambers cleaned after using shorter cartridges as the carbon build up can make chambering the 460 S&W magnum cartridge hard to insert and fully seat and also eject.
@@jeffreylocke8808 thanks for your reply, I do own one & many more, that's why I took the time to warn other shooters on false hype.....of course the mentioned sub-calibers can be inserted & go bang, but considering the incredible "bullet jump" from case to throat distance, accuracy is crap at any distance past 5yds.....stay with .460 case only, have fun & 2A forever!
@@southtownsjoe3309 mine shoots 454 Casull accurately but 45 Long Colt is minute of three inches at 50 yards. Good enough for a close deer... Heavy Long Colt shoots to aim better though.
With the Smith and Wesson 460 line you could do the same thing like 10 years ago? So what's new? I shoot .45 and .454 from my Smith all the time.
I do not want to be the one that says manner - Nana, but I just went and looked and I have a case of Hornady 200 green loaded ammunition for the 460 Smith and Wesson magnum. I picked it up when I got my then new 460 Smith. I guess a have the equal of gold bullion here. Precious metals, I guess so. Thanks for the video
GREAT INFORMATION SIR !:)
THANKYOU!!!
Good episode I learned a bunch I knew the 460 was hot but didn't think as hot keep up the good work 👍
Love the video hoss
I would like to see you shoot a .460 S&W round that penetrates 15"-21" in bare clear gel.
The 460 S&W magnum is the fastest double action revolver cartridge. The 500 Bushwacker from TII Armory is the fastest of all revolvers though, but it is only available in a single action BFR long cylinder. Why? Because the cartridge is too long for the S&W 500 magnum cylinder on their X-frame.
I got a 3.5" smith .460 in October to carry in the woods. I mean, does the Taurus really come close? I got it for bears in Alaska within 15 or so yards, not to hunt with.
I have a question Mr. Bane or one of your viewers. Taurus does not authorize shooting 45 LC or 454 in the 460 Raging Hunter. I have seen it done by many youtubers. Is the reason they don't approve it simply because of the cylinder buildup from the shorter cartridges? Also, Taurus has a lifetime warranty. Would shooting the 45 or 454 void a warranty?
Yes, the shorter cartridges leave a carbon ring that doesn't need to, but really should be cleaned before shooting 460. The 460 has like 65k psi limit, which is stupidly high and the carbon rings will cause the pressure to increase. The more rings there are and the bigger the rings from more ammo being shot, the more severe the pressure spikes. Aside from pressure spikes, it pretty well jams the empty cases in there.
If you are going to drop $1k on the gun and spend at least $40 a box of 45 colt, you really should spend a couple hundred $$$ to buy a single stage press and 460 dies. You can load 460 cases to relatively low pressures with Trail Boss powder and get 45 colt performance for half the price of 45 colt.
$80 press, $40 dies, $16 200 primers, $30 a # of powder, $40 for 250 lead bullets. That's $206 for your first 200 rounds, which is $50 per box of 50. The next 200 bullets is $80, which is $20 a box. Cheap 9mm factory ammo is like $16.
@bobjohnson1633 where are you finding powder for $30 a pound lol.
i had 454 casull in 6 inch raging bull wasn't bad no pain did great. 500 magnum a stomper.
Ever had any problems with it?
The only 460 ammo I can find is HSM bear load from my local sportsman's warehouse. It is advertised as 325gr, 1845ft/s. But I honestly think it is loaded far hotter than that. Or at least the 2 boxes I've fired so far are loaded hotter. I won't be shooting my 460 until I can find some different ammo. Not looking to grenade my $950 gun with over-pressure loads.
Second your decision
@@micharlbane i got ahold of some similar specced Underwood ammo and the recoil was literally half what the hsm bear load was.
I took the chance and tried some more of the hsm bear load that i bought separately from the first two boxes and they also had much less recoil and no signs of over pressure.
So yeah, there was a lot from hsm that was loaded extra hot. Hopefully it was just a one off manufacturing error.
Probably not loaded hotter. Underwood is some notoriously hot ammo, so you're probably getting at or under spec'd ammo. I have some HSM too, and I'd trust it against a bear in anything .44 or higher but its not typically hot at all. You'll still thump pretty hard with the .460 rounds though.
@@kyleritchie50 You weren't paying attention to what I said.
Those first two boxes of HSM had over TWICE the recoil of the Underwood and second two boxes of HSM. They also had several signs of over-pressure and jammed my gun up pretty bad on several occasions.
They were most definitely defective in some way. Either they were loaded with too much powder, the wrong powder, much too tight of a crimp, or some other mistake, because they were absolutely punishing on me, on the gun, and on their own cases.
And HSM doesn't load all of their bear load offerings super hot. I know their 10mm bear load is pretty tame.
@@KurNorock that's completely my bad, I half read it last night (kinda drunk). I'd take that as a win if the .460 is hotter than what's typical though. If you look at their site, it's rated under what underwood offers in a similar format so that's definitely not normal for them.
Id have thought the pressure would be higher than that of the 454 casull, seeing as its a good bit longer and supposed to be a more magnum version of the 454. 454 has a 65000 psi operating pressure.
Generating power isn't all about pressure. There are many other factors that go into it.
The 460 is left to primer pressure. It can be bumped up to 75,000. But you have all sorts of risks for straight walled cartridges.
What the .460 offers is an all around cartridge. You can use it in a full length rifle or a revolver and almost any 45 caliber round as well. You can use it as a bear round, elephant or whatever you want with the heaviest slugs to the lightest. While 454 is slightly limited in the heavy slug high velocity range. With 454 its a trade off. The 460 is like a 45-120 with smokeless powder. It does everything.
Correction ..... Dirty Harry said "the most powerful HANDGUN made" .... didn't say cartridge...
…@ 10:33…Did he say… comes out of an alien space ship 🚀 door…. 🚪
…. I think he knows something that we don’t 😮
Can you hunt a Yautja with those
now i fi can find one in stock literally anywhere
What would you recommend to someone who wants to hunt whitetail with a pistol? But here is the thing the person has a disability on his firing hand so recoil and weight can be a huge issue. What caliber would you recommend? And the gun has to be lethal and accurate out to 100 yards.
Ruger Gp100..
44 Magnum or even the 357 Mag.. my uncle consistently hits the 10 ring with his Gp 100 357 Mag and had taken whitetail deer with his as well.
Don't over look the 357 Mag.. it's been known as the man stopper for good reason. I carry the Sp101 in 357 Mag.. I'd feel comfortable out to fifty yards with it. That's with open sights.
In truth, handgun hunting is all about shot placement, and any of the cartridges typically used can deliver if the shot is placed correctly. White-tailed deer are at the bottom end of the hunting spectrum -- thin-skinned, relatively small. Based on what you're describing, I would go with a .44 Magnum and 240-gr JHP, something like the Hornady XTP, if you can find them. My personal choice would be the Buffalo Bore 240-gr medium cast "Deer Grenades," but they are screamers. Now let's talk about recoil...you cannot have a lighter gun that recoils less. The Taurus Raging Hunter, because of its ports (and weight), and the Colt Anaconda and Ruger Super Redhawk, because if their weight, make shooting the 240-gr loads easy (as, say, compared to a Model 29 or my custom 629 with a titanium cylinder), but they're all over 50 ounces. Let's talk about the 100 yards...all modern revolvers are more accurate then we can shoot them. A 100-yard revolver shot, however, is a serious shot, pretty much my distance limit on game with a red dot or scope on a revolver. If your friend would lessen the distance of his farthest shot to, say 35-50 yards, that would bring the .357 into play; ir, ironically, the 45-70 BFR shooting 405-gr lead loads.
You could easily use a 10mm for that. It has plenty of power and is very flat shooting out to at least 100 yards. It will take any animal in north America and most of the animals in Africa. And it has the added benefit of a large capacity and semi-automatic function for that just-in-case-you-meet-a-bear moment.
And it doesn't have as much recoil as the typical 44mag and larger than so many people mistakenly think you need.
How about an AR-10 308 with a pistol brace? They were designed for this.
6" 357. 180 grain loads.
Does your 460 have any play in the cylinder? Mine has some play
play when not cocked is normal when cocked mine has none
This gun can also shoot 2in 410ga shotgun shells if you can find them!!
The Finnish. That black Finnish on ones I’ve seen seems to easily come off or get scratched. If they would do all stainless or do a blued or something better than that flat black spray pain look they got I believe it would be much better.
Question?????
So…. You say the chamber pressure is the same for the 460 and 454. I have a Raging Judge Magnum 454. Would it be safe to have the cylinder re-chambered for the 460 round??????
Nice video
460 casull super magnum.
I want one 😭
I like the idea of the 460..... but the idea of the 460 is so stinking similar to the reality of the 45-70.... I'd rather the 45-70 due to its ridiculous versatility. If you have a modern-steel strong action, the 45-70 will get the job done every bit as good (and probably a lot better in heavy bullets) than the 460. Due to the length of case, I consider the 454 Casull to be the more versatile of the three you mentioned. It's not too long, not too big and bulky, not too close to a straight-wall rifle case of yore, you can load at least 10 of them in a tubular mag, it's still working with a true six-shooter in Ruger revolvers. Is 454 Casull really necessary? No. A +p 45 Colt will go end-to-end through a big animal smashing bones on the way.
I do agree with you. Some years back we did load tests on jacked up .45 Colts with hard cast lead bullets, and they penetrate like crazy. The .454 comes into its own on really big and dangerous game. I do agree that the 45-70 out of the BFR platform is a far better cartridge then most people think. Most of the people I talk to think it's sort of a joke giant clown gun, but at FTW Ranch a few year snack chief instructor Doug Prichard and I sat on the bend with several boxes of the Hornady 325-gr Leverevolution round (which, BTW, are clearly marked not for use in revolvers, but, hey, who's counting?) ringing a 200-plate pretty easily with recoil that I would class as "moderate" compared to even a lighter bullet .454 or .500 Magnum.
@@micharlbane Pretty much. Obviously with larger case capacity (in .458 bullets) you can get pretty much equivalent velocity as the short hot rounds, with much less pressure and the recoil impulse will be a progressive shove, rather than a blunt whack. The BFR is also heavy enough to dampen out some of the movement, but I wouldn't say a lot more heavy than a Ruger SRH or an X-frame Smith.
With a .460 you can shoot whatever the fuck you want though (up to .460). The versatility of the chambering is impressive. Same diameter, but longer casing so it throws some serious heat at whatever you don't want to be in front of you. The necessity entirely depends on where you live and what its for. I live in Alaska, and I can probably do well with my .44 but the .460 will ruin anything that wants to mess with my summer sunday hikes.
@@kyleritchie50 Right. But as with anything, you'll have a lot of free-bore between the case and the cylinder throat with a 45 colt (or 45 Schofield even) loaded in a 460 cylinder. Does that matter? It fills with carbon and gunk, so enjoy cleaning that. It's equivalent to shooting 22 long rifle in a 10 pound rifle. What's the point? Buy more than one gun. Most people looking to shoot 460 magnum out of an X-frame or equivalent, are buying it for the 460 capability and probably won't be shooting 45 colt very much. Why? It's a heavy brick and tiny recoil in a heavy brick is sort of silly, when you can have very moderate recoil in a very light handy revolver. I'd much rather plink away with a Ruger Vaquero or Pietta Californian or equivalent chambered in 45 colt than hoisting around a giant massive X-frame with a way-too-long cylinder to shoot the same stuff.
@@exothermal.sprocket It might get a little grubby, but it won't make it less effective (especially when its clean). I clean/lube my guns every time I fire them. More buildup doesn't always equate to more work either. It depends on what you want. I live in Alaska and I went .460 because I'm military and I'll be in the lower 48 eventually. I won't need anything more than .45 +p further down the road, and .460 is perfect while I'm here.
A+
👍👍👍👍
The smith n wessons are expensive. This one msrp’s at 1,000$. For a taurus.. just save up the extra 500$ and buy the smith. The smith holds its value. The taurus wont. Taurus doesnt have the best reputation.
The only reason i wont buy one is their capacity. If they can finally have a 6 round .460 revolver. Ill get it. Until then. I may never
too much bla-bla-bla!! are you running an infomercial?
Great Video, I subscribed and rang that bell. Does Taurus make a quality revolver? I would like to try one, but I'm leery about Taurus.
Currently my only Big Bore is a Lipsey's Edition BFR in .460, but had a .500 BFR in the past. Thanks for any input.
Taurus is boss. They have made quality revolvers for years. Each one is an individual so I would only buy new and inspect it first. I have had two.