@@pianoradik1060 amigo querido! Lentablemnte no puedo entender tu idioma pero agradezco tu respuesta! Mi respeto y saludo al pueblo Ruso! Supe navegar algún tiempo y éramos tripulación mixta es decir argentinos y rusos! Exelentes compañeros!
The next day, little Timmy in fact, mistakenly took his father revolver to airsoft event. His father realising the revolver didnt have any recoil, got a call.
I've had several of these. I've found that copious amounts of rapid fire/long term usage grinds the plastic cylinder stop down, this part holds the cylinder in alignment upon the completion of the rotation during the either single or double action firing process. This causes the cylinder to not be aligned with the barrel, instead over-rotaring, causing a misfire. I tested this with a full load of bbs, firing as fast as I could. I actually managed to fire three rounds, because the cylinder would have enough energy to rotate two positions, thereby firing every second round. You will eventually need to replace the cylinder stop, but in a pinch I've found that going into single action mode or more carefully pressing the trigger in double action also works. This works because unlike real revolvers, the barrel is actually spring loaded. The back of the barrel has a cylindrical shape, and interfaces with a grove on the front of the cylinder. This aids in proper alignment and makes careful operation functional even with the cylinder stop being damaged. During normal usage it also aids in gass sealing.
May I suggest researching the Russian Nagant revolver? It also provided a gas seal when firing. As to just how it did this, I will leave for you to discover.
@@paulpitassi oh i know, it makes the nagant revolver one of the ONLY revolvers capable of being suppressed. Quite the cool piece, best depicted in battlefield 1. This revolver functions differently to a nagant. On a nagant the cylinder itself pushes forward slightly, merging with the barrel. This combined with it's unique cartridge gives it a gas seal.
I have that one and hes perfect, the only thing I can say bad about this one its just that the slide in the grip for the Co2 can is too easy to slide back, so when I try to do some 360 verticaly with it it sometimes slide back
@@lucianosilvadeoliveira.3213 depend of your country, just look for "Dan Wesson 715 on google, be careful theres 2 different model, and take a 6mm if its for playing 4.5mm is steal BBs
En caso de invasión cada ciudadano esta autorizado a ser un soldado y defenderse, y hay armas en cada casa. Así que el que venga tendrá guerras de guerrilas y no la tiene fácil. Este es EEUU donde se vive en libertad y democracia. Se pueden tener armas y privilegios que ustedes no saben defender porqué que miran como héroes a los maldito verdugos dictadores de Mrda que ponen a gobernar sus pueblos.
Roughhouse-style, I like that, except when I have to spend extra for being not only irresponsible but stupid 😂, either way it shows a lack of proficiency in marksmanship skills overall... But that's just what I think, everyone is different and acts accordingly!
I love how none of you realise it's an airgun and therefore made of weaker materials, I've actually had this exact gun before. Also I wouldn't slam the cylinder like that even on a real revolver because you eventually bend the crane and the index bolt.
@@BillHunclebuncleit doesn’t matter what the hell kind of gun it is , spinning the cylinder like that and slapping it into battery will most certainly fuck it up Einstein .
I had one similar to this one and a shitty little mouse that was roaming my room for a couple days got a taste of it I never loved it any more than I do now