A thin SHOT show for wheelgun
fans
Wednesday, January 17, 2007 Filed in:
Revolvers, Shooting
industry, Current Events
Well, SHOT has come and gone, and
Colt had no revolvers in their display. (You may remember that one
of their spokespeople bragged in a magazine interview that Colt was
working on a new revolver design. Everyone on the forums got all
worked up about what Colt might be doing, endlessly speculating on
what they might bring to market. Some breathlessly suggested that
they might be working on a new high end revolver to replace the
Python. Excitement ran and, for some, continues to run high.)
Except here at the Revolver Liberation Alliance.
As I blogged just
recently,
Colt has demonstrated through their actions that they aren't
interested in the revolver market. I even suggested that mention of
a new revolver might be a ploy to make the company more attractive
to potential buyers. You'd think that if they really had something
going on, they'd show it at the industry's biggest trade
show.
They didn't. End of story. (I remain ready to eat my words if they
ever introduce this mythical new gun at some future show, but I
suspect that I won't be needing to do so.)
In other SHOT news, Charter Arms, makers of "value priced"
wheelguns, announced a line of left-handed revolvers. This would be
big news if the guns were coming from a maker of high quality
firearms, or even Taurus. From Charter it's just a curiosity. The
honorable lefties amongst us deserve better.
Dan Wesson, lethargically owned for the last couple of years by
CZ-USA, was finally showing a new Model 715. This would be
exciting, except that the folks in Norwich proved that they
couldn't make this decades-old design correctly last time, and I
remain unconvinced that CZ management can do any better. (Let's
face it: they've taken two years to produce one display example of
a gun that they already had the plans, machinery, tooling, and
parts to produce. Methinks they have hired some former Colt people
to run the Dan Wesson division...)
Smith & Wesson is fast becoming the schizophrenic gun maker.
One the one hand they're making modern "reproductions" of the guns
from their heyday (though not to the same level of craftsmanship),
while on the other they are coming up with such monstrosities as
the new "sniper revolver." (Saw pictures, but the site that hosted
them seems to have gone away. If I can find another, I'll post it.)
S&W styling has always been a bit "hit and miss", but in the
21st century seems to have devolved to "miss and miss."
Glad I didn't go; I would have been too depressed to leave the
hotel room!
-=[ Grant ]=-