The result is a truly remarkable, one of a kind sixgun. 44 Magnum and is not considered an SAA clone like the New Vaquero. Seeing as it wasn’t original, Quinn figured he’d have the gun engraved by a friend. Cannot find the box but does still have the hang tag,sorry.Great case color on this gun. 44-40 is a bottleneck cartridge so you have to lube the cases before resizing). New unfired Colt SAA, 44 spl, 7.5 inch barrel with Colt grips. 38/.357 since those rounds are a lot easier to find and to reload (the. The work was beautifully done, and at some point, the one-piece ivory grips were fitted. 44-40 has nearly died off except for its occasional use by SASS shooters, but it seems most replica 18 rifles are chambered in. 44 Special Sheriff’s Model by having a short ejector-less barrel installed, adding a “Sheriff’s Model” style base pin, having the bus for the ejector rod housing milled off the frame, and refinished in all-blue. 45 Colt Single Action Army, with color-casehardened frame and standard black rubber “Eagle” grips, shipped in 1906. Quinn’s revolver was not originally a Sheriff’s Model but was originally a 7-1/2” barreled. 45 Colt was by far the most popular, accounting for 42 of total production, followed by. Colt Cylinder (Only) Colt Single Action Army 44 Special. Original Colt Sheriff’s Models, which featured short barrels without an ejector rod, are extremely rare. The Colt SAA was produced in 36 calibers with many special order features or combinations available directly from the Colt factory. Using genuine Colt parts ensures the same fit, finish, and quality found on the original firearm. After purchasing it at a very reasonable price, he had a friend in the Colt archives research it for him.
He immediately fell in love with the beautiful all-blue finish and one-piece genuine ivory grips. Quinn came across the sixgun at a gun shop in Arizona. Boge Quinn, of the popular Gunblast channel, showed off his “First Generation” Colt Single Action Army “Sheriff’s Model”.