Author Topic: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?  (Read 1222 times)

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Offline mattri

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Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« on: November 13, 2012, 01:13:54 AM »
Looking at getting a NM Blackhawk in 357, 6.5" barrel, blued finish.  What are some things to watch out for when examining the gun?  Obvious misalignments, play in the cylinder, rough bore, anything else? 

Have never owned a revolver before so don't really know what problems these guns may be known for. 

Thoughts? 

Offline drdougrx

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #1 on: November 13, 2012, 04:01:34 AM »
Not much really...they are built like tanks.  A year or so ago, I bought a 41mag that was in really rough shape...sent it Ruger and they replaced everything except the trigger, hammer, cylinder, frame and barrel.  Had them do a re-blue and the total cost to me delivered was $130.

I'd look for rust, pitts, etc.  Really excessive wear.
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Offline mattri

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #2 on: November 13, 2012, 06:35:29 AM »
Thanks for the reply- I'm looking at buying new, are the new models as good as the older ones? 

Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #3 on: November 13, 2012, 06:42:35 AM »
in 357 they are much the same in 44 and 45 they have new ones along with the older style and the new ones are not up to the over loads the older ones could stand. If buying an older gun look ar the five frame screws if buggered up it might indicate someone with less than working knowlege has been working on it. Then also on blued guns the grip frame is alum. on some guns maybe all and if the gun was fed a diet of heavy loads the screws tended to back out wollowing out the holes. I know I have seen it , always kept an extra set in shooting box . Even the 44 mag screws will back out.
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Offline billythekid55

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #4 on: November 13, 2012, 08:08:42 AM »
I have a Blackhawk Convertible. Shoots .38 spcl and .357 magnum. Change the cylinder and it will shoot 9mm. The revolver functions great with both cylinders. Additions:
I added Pachmayr grips - much easier to hold on to. I have a post on here that lists the model number. Search for billythekid55 in this forum
I ordered a "Simply Rugged Cattleman" holster for it. I had a "Simply Rugged Sourdough Pancake" but I did not like it. The 'Cattleman' is much more comfortable. In my opinion, much better than the TrippleK holster that Ruger sells on their website.
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Offline tacklebury

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #5 on: November 13, 2012, 03:53:40 PM »
Most common issue I've heard of with them is that the cylinder throats are often tight.  If you buy one and they are small, they will not be accurate with cast bullets unless you get them reamed to proper dimensions.  I purchased a brand new .45 colt/.45 acp convertible and I couldn't hit an 18x18 target frame at 15 yards.  I was peeved to say the least.  It was returned to Ruger and they ended up replacing the barrel and both cylinders and doing a trigger job free of charge.  It is now my most accurate pistol.  ;)
Tacklebury --}>>>>>    Multi-Barrel: .223 Superlite, 7mm-08 22", .30-40 Krag M158, .357 Maximum 16-1/4 HB, .45 Colt, .45-70 22" irons, 32" .45-70 Peeps, 12 Ga. 3-1/2 w/ Chokes, .410 Smooth slugger, .45 Cal Muzzy, .50 Cal Muzzy, .58 Cal Muzzy

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Offline 45-70.gov

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #6 on: November 13, 2012, 04:43:00 PM »
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Offline gcrank1

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #7 on: December 05, 2012, 05:27:22 AM »
Ha, what to watch out for.....?
That Rugers dont start multiplying in your gunsafe!
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Offline mattri

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #8 on: December 05, 2012, 05:58:05 AM »
Now you tell me!  Bought that 357 a few weeks ago and am already thinking what caliber I need next.

Offline Squib

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #9 on: December 05, 2012, 01:06:37 PM »
I think the hammer throw is a bit much for most, if not all, from the factory.  I don't like the gun "jiggling" from the force of the hammer dropping.  hold one loosely and dry fire it, it's weird.  the gp-100 and super redhawks do it too, but not to that degree (and even less if fired d/a).

as for older ones being stronger, that's just the vaqueros to my knowledge, the originals were rounded/contoured blackhawks, the newer ones are smaller/thinner aka WEAKER in critical areas.  in 45 colt, the issue has been weak cylinder exterior walls, not the frame.  a hot 45 colt is usually not even that much psi, usually not over 30,000.  that is not going to blow a frame on a steel gun- a paper-thin cylinder yes.

Offline gcrank1

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #10 on: December 05, 2012, 01:22:50 PM »
I've never heard the 357s are weaker.
"Halt while I adjust my accoutrements!"
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We are only temporary caretakers of the past heading toward an uncertain future
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Offline Squib

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #11 on: December 06, 2012, 01:47:35 PM »
no one claimed that they (.357 magnum) are/were weaker (in this article).... so did you misread or did someone edit a post before I read that?

Offline gcrank1

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #12 on: December 06, 2012, 03:11:48 PM »
Me misread?......oh come now, surely you jest......(of course I could, have, and likely will again in the future  :P ).
See Shootall's comment of Nov.13; a casual reader, unfamiliar with Rugers, could perhaps get the impression that the new ones arent quite what the old ones were. Just thought Id make for sure and certain on the 357s in particular.

"Halt while I adjust my accoutrements!"
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We are only temporary caretakers of the past heading toward an uncertain future
22Mag UV / 22LR  Sportster
357Mag Schuetzen Special
45-70  SS Ultra Hunter with UV cin.lam. wood
12ga. 'Ol' Ugly OverKill', Buck barrel c/w  SpeedStock  and swap 28" x Full bird barrel, 1974

Offline Squib

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Re: Thinking of buying a Blackhawk- what to watch out for?
« Reply #13 on: December 07, 2012, 02:29:58 AM »
gotcha, I had to read it twice myself.  I don't know about the new/old strength on non vaqueros, I've heard the old blackhawks were harder to blow up, but the screws were easily broken by heavy loads (if they weren't locked down tight with threadlocker).  I'll never load that hot, so who knows?

.357 is higher pressure but the walls are so much thicker on the cylinder, that is an issue on most revolvers that bugs me.  look at a .45 or bigger on most any revolver model and look at how thin the exterior of that cylinder is.... creepy!