I Started a new thread because the title of the old thread had the title changed to "1870's six guns question, Answered and solved"
In the original thread Bendable asked about a swing out cylinder on a revolver in the 1951 film "Fort Worth" starring Randolph Scott.
I posted a clip of the movie showing that the revolver in question was a SAA. Well, tonight I finally got around to watching the movie. In the movie, but not in the scene that Bendable described, a double action swing out cylinder revolver that was modified to look like a "cowboy gun" is shown in close up. It was either a Colt New Model Army, or a Colt New Service that had an ejector rod housing attached to the barrel.
I made a video showing what I'm writing about. It's covered in the first one and a quarter minutes. I follow with the full clip.
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June 01, 2024, 09:07 AM
Jim Watson
I had an old Gun Digest with an article about prop guns, mostly for westerns. There were a lot of double action Colts and Smiths with dummy extractor rod housings for use by actors who had not mastered the single action. I only recall a picture of one New Service with the butt reshaped to the "plowhandle" of a SAA.
The "Remington Look" was popular with webs under the barrel of Colt SAAs to look like Remington 1875s.
June 03, 2024, 02:10 AM
lechiffre
quote:
Originally posted by Jim Watson:
The "Remington Look" was popular with webs under the barrel of Colt SAAs to look like Remington 1875s.
Those Colt/Remingtons show up A LOT. Often paired with Winchester 1892s that have had their hand guards removed and receivers painted gold so that they look like Henry Rifles. They must have made a bunch for a Civil War movie or something.
I just watched a movie tonight "Hangman's Knot" (1954). Nearly the entire cast of about 20 had the Colt/Remington 1892/Henry combination. It is set at the closing of the Civil War. At least they attempted to make the guns look authentic-ish. There was also a S&W No. 2, or maybe 1/2, and a small Remington (I think).
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June 03, 2024, 08:47 AM
Jim Watson
Lt. Lance Caldwell (Rock Hudson) carried a cartridge conversion Colt, in 'Seminole'. Problem was, the Seminole War was in 1835 so the prop department went to all the trouble of furnishing him a still anachronistic weapon.
June 04, 2024, 05:47 PM
cas
Think I've posted this before. "Loading levers" crudely welded to Colt SAA's (probably Great Westerns and not Colts) to simulate black powder revolvers.