soldier506
Regular
- Location
- saskatchewan,canada
Hi, was wondering if anyone currently makes a new break top open replica of the s&w scofield revolver ? I have always had a soft spot for the old western syle guns.
Aahhh, a man after my own heart! I'm also one of the crowd who hold firmly to the belief that any caliber less than .45 seems a bit "wimpy"........ I guess the 38 version would be better for competition, but really, the hole in the end of the barrel is too small.
S&W were originaly approached to remake the Schofield.
Their reply: we no longer have the drawings, it would cost too much to make, there would be no demand.
After Uberti sold them by the truckload, S&W said, well, maybe it would be a good idea....
Of course by then Uberti's were EVERYWHERE.
I often wonder where S&W, like Colt, got the idea of charging an exhorbitant price for a new/old revolver while their standard production models cost less.
I have a pair of Uberti Schofields as I don't care to pay an inflated price for a name on the barrel. With modern CNC machinery, either gun should not cost more than the rest of the line.
Is the Beretta Laramie a reproduction of the Schofield?...
Not really - it appears to be more like the earlier S&W Model No. 3 revolver top-break revolver design - which Uberti also makes. (Keep in mind that Beretta and Uberti are now part of the same company, so the 'Laramie' is likely Uberti-built, with the Beretta name on it.)
The Schofield Model incorporated modifications to the No. 3 design, devised by Major George W. Schofield of the U.S. Army with a view to making it a more practical cavalry sidearm, including a revised top latch system of the stirrup type (somewhat similar to that used on many British top-break revolvers) which was mounted on the frame, rather than the barrelstrap-mounted latch of the No. 3 revolver, permitting the latch to be opened by the action of only one hand, with thumb pressure, rather than requiring both hands.