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also, I'm probably beatin a dead horse here. The Whitneyville, is the transitional gun from Walker to Dragoon? So the 1st Gen Dragoon is not the Whitneyville? correct? This stuff is awesome. Thanks Hawg.
The Whitneyville was between the Walker and dragoon. CAS was ok. It was more to it than I was led to believe when I got into it. The shooting part was fun. The rest of it not so much,
Quote from: Zulch on September 02, 2021, 04:57:31 PMalso, I'm probably beatin a dead horse here. The Whitneyville, is the transitional gun from Walker to Dragoon? So the 1st Gen Dragoon is not the Whitneyville? correct? This stuff is awesome. Thanks Hawg.You mean the 1st model dragoon?If so, no. The 1st carries the squareback trigger guard of the Walker and second, but has the oval cylinder stop notches of the Walker. I happened to stumble upon a First a few years back, hardly fired (if ever):[/url]
Good explanation Cap. No CAS wasn't political. It was running the timer, the loading table, picking up brass, counting hits and misses, etc.
The Whitneyville utilized the grip and grip frame of the Walker but shortened the barrel by half an inch and the cylinder was shortened as well to hold 50 grains of powder, down from the Walker's 60. It also did away with the Walker's cantankerous loading lever latch and put a spring loaded catch on the end of the LL as well as a dovetailed bracket for it to latch on to. The cylinders were blued instead of "in the white" as the Walkers were and featured the oval locking notches that the Walker did. This carried on through the First Dragoon models. Only 240 (roughly) Transitional Walkers were made in comparison to the 1000 military Walkers and 100 Civilian Walkers made, making them highly desirable among collectors. Note how the Walker style grips fade into the frame in comparison to the First Dragoon replica in my photos above, which are squared off in typical 1861 Navy and 1860 Army style
Thanks Hawg. I think I understand your thoughts on CAS. Anyone here ever involved with quick draw competitions? I would like to hear about that. Is quick draw a sub-section of CAS? Or something totally different?
Thanks, Tim! No, I don't have a Transitional Walker (or do you call it a Whitneyville Dragoon...both terms are used!) I have a First and 2 Second Dragoons. I wouldn't mind having a Transitional and a Third to fill out the ranks, though. Along with my Walker, that would complete the Grand Slam of Horse Pistols!
Quote from: Zulch on September 02, 2021, 07:03:57 PM Thanks Hawg. I think I understand your thoughts on CAS. Anyone here ever involved with quick draw competitions? I would like to hear about that. Is quick draw a sub-section of CAS? Or something totally different?No it's not a part of CAS. It's totally different. The only offshoot of CAS is wild bunch matches. They use 1911's.
Cap. Wow. Thank you for the thorough explanation. That is the most detail I have ever gotten on this subject!! Serious! Do either of you have a Whitneyville replica? I see what you mean about the grip too. This info is so good! so thank you both. Tim
Quote from: Zulch on September 02, 2021, 06:58:15 PM Cap. Wow. Thank you for the thorough explanation. That is the most detail I have ever gotten on this subject!! Serious! Do either of you have a Whitneyville replica? I see what you mean about the grip too. This info is so good! so thank you both. TimHere's a little more on the subject, Tim:https://blackpowdersmoke.com/colt/index.php?topic=2389.0Also noteworthy; after the contract for the (roughly) 240 Transitional Walkers was sealed between Colt and Whitney, the entire lot was sold out before they were even produced.