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Why would you prefer just a single trigger for a double-barrelled rifle? Would a bolt-action rifle in that caliber be more practical?
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#2
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As for the triggers a single trigger is generlly regarded as faster, and in the case of a failed first shot you just pull it again rather than having to shift to another trigger. You just need to make sure that the single trigger is mechanically switched rather than inertia switched, as with the latter if you have a dud round (or empty first chamber) the trigger will not switch to the second barrel automatically. |
#3
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#4
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Anyone here still a big enough fan of the movie Heat to actually think about buying this screen-used handgun? |
#5
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You're talking about the most distinctive weapon in one of the beloved gun movies of all time. The only other weapon that would come close in terms of being immediately identifiable would be the Colt Government from Cobra.
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#6
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Or Dirty Harry's Model 29.
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"Everything is impossible until somebody does it - Batman RIP Kevin Conroy, the one true Batman |
#7
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Dirty Harry's Model 29, John McClane's Beretta, or Bond's PPK are rather non-descript, however, and if you saw any of them at the range, you wouldn't think anything of it. If you saw a Colt Officer ACP with white grips, you're going to think Heat.
That's be an interesting list, the most distinctive cinematic firearms. I'd nominate the two mentioned above, the Man from UNCLE P38, the Blade Runner blaster and the MAC-10 from Escape from New York, at the very least.
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Tags |
al pacino, colt, handgun, heat |
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