Steve P +1!!!
"p.s. i am jealous!" Posted by: myronman3 Me TOO!
+1 on the
'maintain what it is, not what someone made theirs do' concept. It is yours, it is very, VERY nice. It is GREAT for what it is designed to do. It will take down whatever you aim it at, within your capabilities. IF
you can't do it with the 41mag, you do need something a lot bigger, maybe a rifle.
I've had a 41mag since 1980, and have had over a dozen in various models. Never felt I was under-gunned. They work. They can be ruined. You don't need to go there. What looks like it works can, over time, break things. I have never broken a part on a Ruger Blackhawk. I have stressed the limits, realized the error of my ways, and backed off a touch. Sometimes that "little bit more" is what does the damage. Stay cool.
"According to the folks at FA, forcing cone erosion is caused by pushing lead bullets at too high a velocity. Pushing jacketed bullets at high velocity apparently doesn't cause the same damage." Posted by: cprher I respectfully have to disagree with this statement. I offer up as evidence one each S&W Model 19 357Mag NIB January 1979. Back in my 'hot-rod' days, I pulled a load out of a magazine (we don't do that!), made 50 rounds with 125gr JHP's and went to my favorite gravel pit on the Kirkland Road in Stillwater, Maine, just a few miles from my house at that time and very convenient. By the time load #50 was fired, I nearly needed a hammer to open the cylinder! I had split the forcing cone in three (3) places and locked the cylinder in place. High speed jacketed bullets did the damage, read that
high pressure jacketed bullets. To their credit, S&W fitted a new barrel and paid the return shipping. Even sent me a note complimenting the action work that had been done - smooth and uncomprimising the warranty.
Forcing cone erosion (hot gas, high pressure) is probably preliminary to forcing cone split
I really have to believe bullet type to be very secondary. Correction??