I hope a .50-caliber cap and ball revolver is never available.
We don't need it.
I can see it now ... .50-caliber, loaded with nylon sabots filled with .44 jacketed bullets, Pyrodex pellets or (ack!) smokeless powder (curses on Savage!) and shotgun primers for igntion! And probably a hydraulic rammer too!
Makes me wanna thrup!
I had thought that cap and ball sixguns were the last bastion of REAL blackpowder shooting. Sure enough, some jackleg will come along and poison that standing.
The Ruger Old Army was enough. I don't have a problem with it. A quality, modern target gun was needed at the time. Also, a lot of nice, old, original Remingtons were being butchered with the addition of adjustable sights and other doodads. The Ruger probably saved tons of Remingtons from such butchery.
But a .50-caliber cap and ball? For what use?
If you must hunt big game with a black powder sixgun, then load .45 Colt cartridges with the ancient propellant. The late gun writer Elmer Keith killed a lot of deer and elk with the .45 Colt and blackpowder loads until he started experimenting with the .44 Special and heavy smokeless powder loads.
The only reason I see someone buying a .50-caliber cap and ball sixgun is for bragging rights.
They'll make wild claims about its power and strut around like peacocks, denigrating the rest of us with "puny" .44s and .36s. Of course, most of them won't be able to hit a paper plate at 25 yards with the thing; it's the nature of such immature braggarts.
I saw plenty of these types when the .44 Magnum became generally available in the 1960s and 1970s. Then they resurfaced when the .454 Casull came out. Then they craweled out of the woodwork again when hot, dangerous loads for the .45-70 became the rage.
Their testosterone and ignorance will be exceeded only by their B.S. as they spout all kinds of wild ballistic claims from the maker (gee, now THERE is an objective source!).
I hope they don't profane the sport of shooting cap and ball sixguns with such an abomination.
ACK!