I have given up on them, sent 3 of 3 of my last .22s back. They fixed one, the other two were so out of spec they had to replace them!
I have given up on them, sent 3 of 3 of my last .22s back. They fixed one, the other two were so out of spec they had to replace them!
It would be a nice thing if Taurus firearms could shake its previous spotty reputation, but that means more people would have to be willing to give them a try.
I saw only a small number of their pistols and revolvers come through our range for use as off-duty weapons, but they all passed functioning inspections and live-fire. One of the .44MAG revolvers was bought by a member of the range staff, and the revolver armorer of that time opened it up and did a couple very minor adjustments (could've been done during assembly and fitting), and then pronounced it okay.
I saw the model 2-856EX39CH Executive Grade is on the CA Roster, and I'd be tempted to give it a try to see how well it withstands a steady diet of +P loads. 25 ounces seems like a nice weight for a 6-shot .38SPL, being 2oz lighter than a 3" Ruger SP101. I think the 3" barrel would help make it 'service-worthy', since it was a popular barrel for LE plainclothes revolver users in the older revolver days. While I wouldn't pay $700 for one, I might be tempted at $500. Have to wait and see how things go this year ... and see how this new line fairs in the hands of more actual users.
Thanks.
Now that I'm retired and no longer serving as an instructor and armorer, I rather doubt I'll be shooting nearly as much in any new guns I buy going forward. Not having access to a free ammunition inventory is one factor.
One of the reasons I began adding to my collection of 5-shot revolvers was to keep spreading out the range use and total round count from going too high on any particular snub. I doubt I've fired more than 3-5K through any one particular snub, so it's not like I'd think to wear out any new wheelgun, especially since I got out of reloading some years ago, and ammunition has become more than a little expensive.
10K rounds is pretty respectable for a smallish .38SPL revolver, especially if it involves a steady diet of +P. Do you mind me asking how the flame cutting may have affected the B/C gap over that time, meaning the normal erosion of the cylinder face and rear of the barrel opening the B/C gap? How about any end shake? Have to stretch the yoke during that time? I may have been trained as a S&W revolver armorer, and have the standard tools and a small supply of parts for my snubs, but that doesn't mean I want to have to repair them anymore nowadays.
Last edited by fastbolt; 02-06-2024 at 08:02 PM.
Quick note: the Taurus 82 is a medium frame revolver, more of a K/L frame size. That’s the gun I did 10k on.
As far as damage, I gauged it with feeler gauges vs a sample that had only fired 250 rounds and the cylinder gap was the same, and I didn’t have a feeler gauge small enough to measure flame cutting.
Nothing but good things to say about the 856 Defender 3" I purchased 2 years ago. An accurate, well running revolver.
"... And miles to go before I sleep".
gn
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The industry standard appears to be at an all time low. What I would love to see is the industry as a whole trying to do better. While a return rate may be small, at best it's an inconvenience to the customer. If you told me that Taurus has better rates of return than Colt, S&W, Ruger, and Beretta (who have sunk to new or not so new lows), you'd have my attention.
"Gunfighting is a thinking man's game. So we might want to bring thinking back into it."-MDFA
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Hey, @jetfire. I would like to see Taurus provide better customer service for folks who can and do perform their own firearms repairs. Requirng to send a firearm to the Mothership and waiting weeks and weeks for its return when only a simple replacement part is needed is sophomoric...a non-starter for me.