Dennis Adler

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A Street-Legal Shorty Double Barrel? The Pedersoli Howdah .45/.410 - Full Review.

A Street-Legal Shorty Double Barrel? The Pedersoli Howdah .45/.410 – Full Review.

The new Pedersoli Howdah double pistol from the Italian Firearms Group is an historic design with a lineage that dates back to late 19th century Europe and development of the first Howdah-style double barrel pistols for big game hunters.

Cowboy Time Machine: Legendary Bat Masterson, Colt Single Actions & Wyatt Earp – Part 2

Cowboy Time Machine: Legendary Bat Masterson, Colt Single Actions & Wyatt Earp – Part 2

There is an old adage that “there are bold gunfighters and there are old gunfighters, but that there are no old, bold gunfighters.” Bat Masterson was one of the few exceptions. Long after Dodge City was behind him Bat kept the legend alive, not as a gunfighter or lawman but as a journalist; proof perhaps, that the pen is indeed mightier than the sword, or the gun!

Cowboy Time Machine: Legendary Bat Masterson, Colt Single Actions & Wyatt Earp - Part 1

Cowboy Time Machine: Legendary Bat Masterson, Colt Single Actions & Wyatt Earp – Part 1

By the time William Barclay “Bat” Masterson received the handsome, nickel plated and hand engraved six-shooter pictured, he was already a legendry lawman, as famous as his friends Wyatt Earp, Charlie Bassett and Bill Tilghman.

Dump Your .380 and Get This 9mm: Kimber’s Tiny Micro 9—Full Review.

Dump Your .380 and Get This 9mm: Kimber’s Tiny Micro 9—Full Review.

Kimber turned its sights on the .380 concept with the Micro CDP and an entire Micro .380 line. Looking like a highly refined Colt Mustang (exactly what it is, just like the Sig Sauer P238 Series) with a standard capacity of 6 +1 the .380 ACP Micro series left Kimber with one remaining challenge and in 2016 Kimber took the next logical step by introducing a slightly larger Micro variation chambered in 9mm.

Cowboy Time Machine: The Mysterious 1860 Army Cartridge Conversions

Cowboy Time Machine: The Mysterious 1860 Army Cartridge Conversions

A great mystery in the world of classic revolvers is the story of the 1860 Army cartridge conversions. Were they made by Colt’s, or were they merely the creations of gunsmiths addressing a demand from consumers? Read on to find out the story behind these and how you can buy one for yourself.

Cowboy Time Machine: Colt's First Revolver, the Paterson, Yesterday & Today

Cowboy Time Machine: Colt’s First Revolver, the Paterson, Yesterday & Today

Prior to Samuel Colt’s 1835-1836 patents for the revolver, American handguns were, for the most part, variations of European-style single shot pistols, first of the flintlock type and later the new cap-and-ball percussion lock design. There were double barrels, swivel barrels, and even multiple barreled Pepperbox pistols, but the revolver was at best a theoretical design before 1836. This is not to say that revolvers did not exist before Colt’s patent, they just didn’t work. Samuel Colt’s design did. This is the story of how it came to be.

The Ruger .380 LCP Reborn: The New LCP II—Full Review.

The Ruger .380 LCP Reborn: The New LCP II—Full Review.

For more information, visit . To purchase a Ruger LCP II on GunsAmerica.com, click this link: . Making improvements to an iconic firearm is always a tough decision. And yes, the is iconic; it was one of the significant catalysts for the now prolific variety of .380 ACP pocket pistols on the market, and the [...]

Cowboy Time Machine: New U.S.-Made Iron Frame Henry—Full Review.

Cowboy Time Machine: New U.S.-Made Iron Frame Henry—Full Review.

The 1860 Henry, a paradigm-shifting lever action that first appeared in the Civil War era and influenced firearm design well into the future. But, originals of this firearm can be rare and expensive. So what about those of us who would like to own one for themselves, one that we can actually shoot?

Cowboy Time Machine: Uberti Replaces SAA Transfer Bar w/Glock Style Floating Pin - Cattleman II Review

Cowboy Time Machine: Uberti Replaces SAA Transfer Bar w/Glock Style Floating Pin – Cattleman II Review

More than 140 years after the Colt SAA was invented, Uberti decided it was high time to change the rules and engineered a solution to the historic problem of having to “safely” carry a Single Action with the hammer resting on an empty chamber.