![]() Interestingly, its barrel is oddly shaped: flat on the sides, rounded beneath and with a full-length rib on top. The grip’s backstrap is serrated, and the hammer and break-open lever are nicely checkered. Its single-action trigger is reasonable at five pounds. Its double-action trigger pull is one of the shortest I’ve ever encountered during 50+ years of shooting. 2 Mk I in my collection weighs a mere 28 ounces with a 5″ barrel and checkered walnut grips. A variant - the No2 Mk I* - is double action only because it was issued to tank crewmen who didn’t want hammer spurs hanging up in emergencies such as bailing out of their burning Sherman after tangling with a German Tiger. It’s a delightful little revolver with break-open function and a double-action trigger mechanism. That’s a 260-grain bullet at 650 fps!īut one time with one handgun the Brits almost got things right. It’s a huge honker of a sixgun but chambered for a little quack of a cartridge. Oh, heck, they almost never get things right. ![]() Well, they usually don’t get things right. In regards to handguns, the British often don’t get things right. ![]()
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