Hey,
does anyone on here own one of these? If so would you be interested in letting me shoot it? I'm thinking about buying one, but would like to shoot it first
Hey,
does anyone on here own one of these? If so would you be interested in letting me shoot it? I'm thinking about buying one, but would like to shoot it first
I think that The Firing Line in Aurora has one that you can rent. But don't quote me.
Just remember that if you rent from them, you have to use their ammo and they don't clean the weapons too well.
I'm not too worried abou how well it shoots. I just want to feel the kick before I spent 1300$. Thanks for the advice, I'll give them a call tomorrow
nice! what you gonna use it fer?
or manbearpig attacks...
I have put between 200 and 300 rounds through the S&W 500 with an long barrel up to around 485gr. This is a nice shooting gun with minimal kick for the size of round. It is also a very heavy gun which helps to minimize recoil. You get some muzzle lift, but not anywhere near what you are expecting, though not to the point where you can 'double tap'.
I thought the gun was surprisingly accurate as the very first round I ever put through one was a 25yard shot into a block of quartz the size of a squash wedged into a tree...and I am not a stellar pistol shot.
I personally wouldn't buy one simply due the size and weight factor which makes carrying one a bit of an issue. This, coupled with the size of the pistol ( I heard that S&W is doing a 4" version) at least with an long barrel, means that the only way that the only way you are going to be able to carry it is in a cross draw, over the chest style, hunting holster. Not the kind of holster that allows for a fast, emergency draw...
The above led me to purchase an AirWeight S&W 44 with a stubby barrel. It is a royal ******* to shoot because it is so light, but it is compact, lightweight, will fit in a shoulder holster rig, and will shoot 44 magnums. I didn't buy this gun for plinking. I wanted one for that, I would've gotten a 9mm. I can get two rounds into a torso sized target at 50' almost all the time, though not a double tap as the gun both bounces and twists due to it's light weight. This is good enough for me.
Incidentally, the 500 shoots WAY better than the 44 AirWeight. Easy to put a bunch of rounds through the 500 comfortably, where to shoot a bunch through the 44, you have to detune the rounds to low end 44 specials.
Forget that....if you're gonna buy a $1300 gun, get a Tiger Stripe gold plated Desert eagle :lol:
for $1300 you can get a stag arms 6.8 spc, like the one im getting.
Thanks for the info Brody, that's what I've heard about the gun. I had a Smith and Wesson 386SC (one the AirLite Ti ones) and it was stolen. the 4" model of the 500 is 10 1/4 inches long. I think it's going to be a little big to backpack with, but I wanted to see it in person. I'm not buying for a CCW weapon if I get that. Originally when I set out to replace my stolen gun I was trying to find something that would work as a back up gun, a CCW, and protection against bears while backpacking. Doesn't look like there's an ideal gun out there for all three.
I do not want a "display gun" it will be used frequently. I considered an assault rifle or any other rifle, but I don't think that will work out very well with my backpack.
Those are some of the reasons that I went with the AirWieght 44. It was light, packed a punch, small enough to both carry in a shoulder holster and relatively fast to draw. I needed something that I could carry when I had a big pack on filled with climbing gear on narrow and hard trails. I previously had a long barrel (like the S&W500) 44, Blackhawk or Super Blackhawk, I forget which one, that was more accurate and nicer to shoot, but way too heavy and awkward to carry. I tried the hunting big revolver style holster, but forget fast draws with that. I would have been mauled, eaten digested and turned into manure before I could draw it.
FYI, I managed to put a 300gr 44 hardened slug through an 10" tree from 30'. Except for the exit, it looked like it was drilled. Good enough. I want something to kill or maim a big animal and this combo would break about any bone it hit or go through a thick skull.
The biggest problem with my gun is that it is really no fun to just shoot. The magnum rounds actually bruise your hand and also heat up the cylinder after shooting 6 of them off so that you have to wait for it to cool down to reload. The 44 specials don't have this effect.
I'll look into the .44. I've been highly considering the SIG p229 DAK. It allows you to interchange the barrels between a 40 and a 357. I'm still torn if a high powered 357 round is gunna be enough. A lot of people seem to say that a .357 is the minimum for black bears, but they'd rather carry a 45. But then I've been told that a 45 doesn't have the penetrating power to do the job. I like the idea of being able to switch the barrels, then it can be used as a CCW, back up gun as a cop, and for protection on the trail, if a 357 is enough.
speaking of guns, just got word that my stag will be shipped in a month! who wants to go shootin!