You guys have been helpful on the possible problem that killed my 1851 Euroarms Colt. The cylinder pin seemed to be tight into the frame as I recall, but the insert that the wedge went into was mishapen due to wear. To reduce wear on that area, I only pulled the wedge out (pounded with a rubber hammer) at the end of the shooting day for cleaning. I shot the gun regularly for 7 years. All my Colt black powder guns had to have the wedges pounded in and out with a rubber hammer to hold the gun intact. My friend had his Armi San Marco 1860 Colt wedge loose enough to simply pull out the wedge with his hand.
I bought an EMF 1858 Remington revolver in 1990 that seemed to have better steel and finish over the circa 1980 Euroarms 1851 Colt, but sold it as the accuracy was moody.
I have been reading that the Pietta brand that Cabelas carries are pretty decent for the money. I am thinking of the 1851 Colt or 1860 Colt. The official Colt brand guns are too expensive and pretty to buy. I used to primarily use pyrodex when I had my guns, started with regular black powder, but thought pyrodex would be less corrosive. I let my 1847 Colt Walker go 2 days once without cleaning and there was some feint rust spots on the cylinder front. Nothing serious, but a reminder that they should be cleaned within 24 hrs. I usually wiped them down after shooting, and gave a full clean the next day in the morning without a problem.
I used to keep the loads down, not full charge, would I be better off with traditional black powder over any of the substitutes? Which is stronger, the 1851 or the 1860 Colt? I prefer the 1860 in feel, but the .36 caliber on the 1851 might reduce stress over the .44 with the 1860? :? The little 1849 pocket Colt is something I have always wanted, the orginals were used as backups with the enlisted men in the Civil War, that seems to say that they were the equivalent of the snubby .38 Smith and Wesson of modern times, good for close quarter defense, but not something you want to target shoot with.
Thanks