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Doc Hoy

New member
Went to the gunshow in Virginia Beach.

Picked up an Uberti Smoke Wagon .357 and 5 1/2 inch barrel NIB for 430.00.

The vendor had two of them.
 

Doc Hoy

New member
Here ya go.

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Doc Hoy

New member
I am particularly pleased.....

....with the price on this revolver. In fact, I left the gunshow to come back to the house and check the value of a Smokewagon. It appeared that the price I paid is about a hundred less than market. So I went back to the show and bought it. No FFL fees, or shipping, Just 3.00 for the BI plus tax.

I need another revolver like a turtle needs seat belts but I couldn't pass up the deal.

There was a Rossi .357 saddle ring carbine for 429.00 which is about 30 bucks off the going rate too. I just bought a carbine in .45LC so I passed on that. There was also an H&R break open rifle in .45-70 with a two to eight scope for 359.00 which also appears to be about a hundred dollars shy of the market. All of these were NIB.

Ammunition is more plentiful. Still not very much but at least you can get some of the components. I bought some large pistol primers and some .357 brass.
 

Doc Hoy

New member
Thanks for all the responses, fellas.

This morning I was very close to going back to get the H&R but I gave it up.

It isn't really the kind of rifle I shoot.
 

Doc Hoy

New member
DS303

I can't answer your question.

It is an odd name. The revolver is good for smokeless loads, although it will see few of those as long as I own it.

There are several other names that are applied to Uberti clones of the 1873 Colt.

"Running Iron" comes to mind.

I am wondering if these are actually translations of Italian names designated by Uberti. The phrases, "Smoke Wagon" and "Running Iron" don't seem to have the flair that we in the U.S. might identify with. But the words might mean more to an Italian. I am thinking this is much the same as some of the odd (to us) mannerisms in the spaghetti westerns. Just as those movies seemed over-the-top and a little off, so do the names Smoke Wagon and Running Iron.

I might add that the only place that the words Smoke Wagon appear is on an after manufacture "Taylor's sticker on the box.

I might also add that Taylor's price is a bit lower than the vendor on Gunbroker who appears to be buying them and then marking them up.

Taylor's wants 505.00 plus shipping plus FFL.
 

Hawg

New member
Taylor's marketing. My guess is it's from the movie Tombstone, where Wyatt says "Go ahead and skin that smoke wagon and see what happens".
 

deerslayer303

New member
Could be Hawg, after all it IS a GREAT one liner!! :D So are all Uberti's 1873 Clones rated for full power smokeless loads? I've often eyeballed them. One in .45 LC would fit right nice in the collection ;)
 

deerslayer303

New member
Not meaning to hijack your thread Doc, But do ya'll know much about the Pietta made 1873 clones? Dixie has a standard blued one 4.75" barrel for 375.00. Boy oh boy, I need to hop in the pickup one day and drive over there and help this disastrous economy out! ;)
 

Hawg

New member
I've heard nothing bad about them. They probably have Pietta's billboard plastered on the side of the barrel. Taylors sells them too.
 

deerslayer303

New member
They probably have Pietta's billboard plastered on the side of the barrel.

:) Indeed you are probably right, you know EVERYONE who owns a Pietta complains about that very same thing. And don't they know they would sell more if they would just REDUCE THE FONT!!
 
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