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I can not answer your question, however I recently handled a .36 caliber 51 Navy and a 1860 Army .44 caliber together side by side and can definitely say the Navy feels better in my hand. While I prefer the.44 over the .36 for power I would probably go with the .36 based upon feel and handling. Fortunately I don't have to depend on either when the Wolf is at the door.
RustyJr
Life is a storm, my young friend. You will bask in the sunlight one moment, be shattered on the rocks the next. What makes you a man is what you do when that storm comes.
Originals never came in .44. However, both Pietta and IIRC, ASM built some .44s on a rebated '51 frame. I'm not sure but Uberti may have done some also over the years.
Griff,
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession! AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
There are several around my place. I really like the 1860s best but that '51 in whichever cal can be very dependable with just a little tweakin'. A set of Treso nipples is the first thing and probably "Wonder Wads". Shoot that thing!
M. M. Wright, Sheriff, Green county Arkansas (1860)
Currently living my eternal life.
NRA Life
SASS
ITSASS
IIRC, the original Colt .44cal Model 1860 Army was built on the .36cal M-1851 frame, with the frame rebated for the larger diameter cylinder, and larger/longer gripframe/grips - similar to the way Colt made the .36cal Model 1862 from the smaller-framed .31cal Model 1849 frame.
IIRC, the original Colt .44cal Model 1860 Army was built on the .36cal M-1851 frame, with the frame rebated for the larger diameter cylinder, and larger/longer gripframe/grips - similar to the way Colt made the .36cal Model 1862 from the smaller-framed .31cal Model 1849 frame.
.
That's correct. I wasn't clear... Colt never made the "Belt Model of 1851" in a .44 caliber, but several of the recent clone manufacturers have invented one...
Griff,
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession! AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
IIRC, the original Colt .44cal Model 1860 Army was built on the .36cal M-1851 frame, with the frame rebated for the larger diameter cylinder, and larger/longer gripframe/grips - similar to the way Colt made the .36cal Model 1862 from the smaller-framed .31cal Model 1849 frame.
.
That's correct. I wasn't clear... Colt never made the "Belt Model of 1851" in a .44 caliber, but several of the recent clone manufacturers have invented one...
Correct!
IIRC, only one period model was basically a "1851" in .44 caliber, and that was the Dance Brothers model (most were .44 with a few in .36). Dance was one of many manufacturers trying to make handguns for the Confederacy during the civil war. Almost all of these were copies - some pretty good (like the Dance), others not good at all - of the most popular handgun of the period - the Colt 1851 Navy. The 1860 was considered harder to make, and with resources limited, and time of the essence, I'm not aware of any southern clones of the 1860 Army.
I love original and period-correct reproductions. I have a Pietta 1851 "sheriff", brass frame, in .44 caliber - but only because I got it for a song and little else. With so many nice period-correct cap & ball revolvers available, the others just don't interest me. That is not to say though that they wouldn't make fine shooters!
I presume that, during the US Civil War, there were few or no Colt Model 1860 clones because IMO it would be much simpler to make an octagon barrel than to make the more complex M-1860's round barrel & loading ram housing, etc.
I love original and period-correct reproductions. I have a Pietta 1851 "sheriff", brass frame, in .44 caliber - but only because I got it for a song and little else. With so many nice period-correct cap & ball revolvers available, the others just don't interest me. That is not to say though that they wouldn't make fine shooters!
GK Jr has the same Pietta in .44 unfortunately it was an "inert" copy sold in the UK to folks who couldn't have a live firing one, it always bugged me that it was the wrong caliber even though we couldn't shoot it.
I had three Colt clones, a 1851 by Uberti in .36, a Metropolitan police by Pietta in .36 and a little 1849 pocket Colt in .31.
That little .31 spit balls back at you as fast as they left the muzzle.
Whatever you do always give 100%........... unless you are donating blood.
Copy of the .44 1851 REB model, produced in the South, during the Civil war. It had a brass frame, due to the South's lack of raw materials and Factories.
tman wrote:Copy of the .44 1851 REB model, produced in the South, during the Civil war. It had a brass frame, due to the South's lack of raw materials and Factories.
The South did use a lot of brass for frames, due to the lack of iron, which was saved for cylinders and barrels (which could not be done in brass). However, I believe the 1851 "Reb" in .44 is a creative interpretation, not based on anything that really existed.