And… everything you need right there in the box to get her shooting!1851 Colt Navy reproduction, looks to be from either Uberti or Pietta.
He used a pair- twist draw.A fella by the name of Hickok liked them![]()
If you mean the light colored plate held by 4 screws… it’s a piece of 1/4” plywood I added to help stabilize the butt of the pistol. The red fabric is cheap felt cloth for padding. Pic of muzzleloader pistol in stand. Works equally well for holding and loading C&B revolver.What’s the metal thing under the grip?
Who knows? Use quote function for clear comm.No. In the case under the 1861 from the OP.
Agreed. At one time I had 7 different original C&B revolvers. They were all excellent condition higher condition collectibles . I enjoyed shooting a couple of them. They require dedication in cleaning. The reproductions like the one pictured in the OP are fun to shoot but at + or - a few hundred dollars so not much risk to loss of value by degradation compared to originals valued at few thousand dollars.That little part is for something else entirely unknown. It definitely has no relation to the pistol whatsoever. I used to shoot and collect these all the time, they're fun, but as one gets older, the constant cleaning of them is a royal pain after shooting. The last percussion revolver I bought was a Uberti 2nd model Dragoon from Midway and it is still unfired and mint, simply because I don't want to clean it. I just sometimes look at it, and that's all I wanted it for. I guess I could say the same for a lot of my smokeless guns too, come to think of it![]()