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A Webley RIC Pattern
Solid Frame Revolver
by Ed Buffaloe
I bought this gun because it is visually appealing to me and it can still be shot, as the British .455 cartridge remains in production. I have a weakness for large bore revolvers, particularly if they are compact. However, far be it from me to attempt a history of Webley revolvers. Instead, I want to share this one revolver with the reader and explain what I have learned about it.
Webley-RIC-102430-LA
Apparently Webley was just another small-time weapon maker in the gun district of Birmingham until they got a contract to make 1000 pistols in .442 caliber for the Royal Irish Constabulary in 1868, based on a design they had first produced in 1867. These were the first RIC pattern revolvers, built on a short frame with a short cylinder, but with six shots and usually a longer barrel than what is shown here, 4½” being typical. The RIC revolver eventually spawned the British Bulldog (1878-1912), the Metropolitan Police, the Army Express, and other Webley revolvers.
Webley-RIC-102430-R1
I won’t bore the reader by explicating the permutations of RIC revolvers (which however can be discovered in the reference books listed below) but suffice it to say that eventually the RIC revolver evolved into the gun pictured here, which is known as a Model 1883 or M/83. Black, Davis, & Michaud state: “The early RIC Model/83 was essentially the No. 2 British Bull Dog with a truncated thickened grip. Unlike Webley’s British Bulldog, the later RIC Model/83s were made with a longer cylinder.”
The M/83 was kept in production longer than any other solid frame revolver. According to Black, Davis, and Michaud the company stopped ordering new frames from their supplier in 1893, but they had so many left in inventory that the last guns were manufactured in the 1930’s, albeit in very small quantities. They were still being offered for sale new in the U.S. by the Stoeger company as late as 1928.
Webley-RIC-102430-LA2
The M/83 is mostly found chambered in .450 or .455, but a few were made in .44 Russian, and the final production gun is chambered for the .45 ACP cartridge. They are all five-shot revolvers with mostly short 2-3/8 to 2-1/2 inch barrels (though the very last gun produced was given a 3 inch barrel).
Barrel-marks
I wrote to Richard Milner at the Webley & Scott Archives and Research and paid £20 to learn that my gun was made in 1923 and sold to the W&C Scott Arms Company of New York in October of 1926. The highest known serial number for an M/83 is 102634, made sometime in the 1930’s, so my gun is only 204 guns from the end of production.
Fiocchi makes the most commonly found .455 ammunition, but I had trouble with the batch I bought.
One cartridge fired the primer but the powder did not ignite--I found the bullet on the ground about six feet short of the target. Recoil caused a bullet to work its way out of another Fiocchi cartridge, locking up the cylinder. Fiocchi uses a cone-shaped 262 grain bullet. Another brand of ammunition, On-Target, loaded with a 262 grain round nose flat point bullet functioned flawlessly in the old gun, and I managed a group about 2¼ inches across with it--single action of course.
The double action trigger pull is a surprisingly good 12 pounds, but I would need an oversize grip to get the right distance to the trigger for my hands. Muzzle velocity averaged a relatively slow 546 feet per second from the short barrel, giving a muzzle energy of 174 foot pounds, which is approximately equivalent to a .38 special target round. The swivel ejector rod is funky at best, but works if you hold the cylinder in precisely the correct position. In its day the M/83 was an excellent revolver for close-in self-defense, and could still be used today in a pinch. I have read that the Australians used some M/83 revolvers as late as World War II.
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Webley R.I.C. No 1 New Model .455 SN: 6089
English made solid frame double action revolver chambered for .450 Adams, manufactured by P. Webley & Son for the Royal Irish Constabulary. Features it's original bright blued finish, 4.5" bbl, round blade front sight, 'v' notched rear sight, fluted six-shot cylinder, pivoting loading gate, swing-out ejector rod, rounded trigger, knurled hammer spur, lanyard ring and one-piece checkered walnut wrap-around grip. Serial numbers on the frame & cylinder are matching. Markings: Top Strap - "P. WEBLEY & SON" & "LONDON & BIRMINGHAM," Left Side of the Frame - "WEBLEY'S/R.I.C/No1.455CF," "NEW MODEL," & [winged bullet]"W&S." ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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WEBLEY R.I.C. NEW MODEL - C59999
450/476; very good bore, excellent grips, 4 1/2'' barrel, WEBLEY R.I.C.NEW MODEL NO 1 IN EXCELLENT REFINISHED CONDITION. THE REVOLVER HAS BEEN CHROME PLATED BUT IT WAS VERY WELL DONE AND IS IN OVERALL EXCELLENT CONDITION WITH SOME LIGHT SPOTTING OVER...