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Post by hardscrabble on Jan 1, 2018 21:24:19 GMT -5
I rented a 4" Rhino at my gunrange a few years ago. Had to buy factory ammo from them in order to shoot it. Being the first .357 Magnum factory I had bought in years, the cost was shocking. I am glad I tried it. It had without a doubt the worst trigger pull of any gun I have ever fired. VERY, Very, very heavy trigger pull. It was totally impossible to keep the gun anywhere on target while pulling the trigger. Since no one here has mentioned that, I wonder if the rental was broken in some way. Once it did fire, however, the lower barrel made the apparent recoil much less.
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Post by tinkerpearce on Jan 1, 2018 23:41:18 GMT -5
I rented a 4" Rhino at my gunrange a few years ago. Had to buy factory ammo from them in order to shoot it. Being the first .357 Magnum factory I had bought in years, the cost was shocking. I am glad I tried it. It had without a doubt the worst trigger pull of any gun I have ever fired. VERY, Very, very heavy trigger pull. It was totally impossible to keep the gun anywhere on target while pulling the trigger. Since no one here has mentioned that, I wonder if the rental was broken in some way. Once it did fire, however, the lower barrel made the apparent recoil much less. Mine has a really good trigger, and people frequently comment on the triggers being good. I suspect the range-gun may have had 'issues.'
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mbogo
.30 Stingray
Posts: 150
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Post by mbogo on Jan 2, 2018 1:08:28 GMT -5
A few years ago, I bumped into a guy from a couple of lifetimes ago, working at a local range. He had one and loved it. He let me put a couple of cylinders through it, and the trigger was CREEPY, and different than anything I'd ever felt. A stock Redhawk trigger is gold standard compared to the Rhino he had. I am used to older S&W D/A revolvers. I liked the recoil with the bottom barrel configuration. It sounds like they've improved the trigger, which is a win for end users.
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