• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Why are there no 40 cal Revolvers?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Mar 30, 2023
Messages
654
Reaction score
1,955
Location
Cheatham County, TN
As popular as 40 cal rifles have been and having built one recently for myself, I started looking for a 40 cal revolver to add to the fun. I was amazed that there are none. None I could find, anyway.

I saw a reference in a magazine article to .40 being one of the original calibers the Colt Old Army was produced in, but that’s it. Just that one mention.

Anyone know of any in production?
 
They sort of did, but you have to look at early cartridge guns. Is not the 38/40 projectile .401 diam? So they came up with the cartridges dimensions from boring through C&B cylinders and just changing the easy bits e.g. "the barrel", maybe the 36cal is/was just too underpowered, the larger the lump of lead the harder it hits.
 
I wonder who hard that would be to pull off? Probably more importantly to me, how expensive? Hmmm...
Like @azmntman said, you could certainly have one made. Doesn't take much to punch a .38 out to a .40, and .38 is what the ".36" cal revolvers are. Maybe Lodgewood could help or @45D might have some suggestions.
 
I wanted to try the .40 caliber like the prototypes that Colt was working on so in 2017 it was my birthday present. Last time I heard the smith who rebored the barrel no longer does. I use .41 ball and have thought a few times about a rifle to match.

2017-12-02 .40 Colt.JPG
 
.... Probably more importantly to me, how expensive? Hmmm...
I would guess it costs more than the gun did originally, if you want it done decently and in a reasonable amount of time.

Good machinists/gunsmiths are dying off, and the leftover good ones are charging some serious coin, IF you can even find one who isn't backed up over a year.
 
As popular as 40 cal rifles have been and having built one recently for myself, I started looking for a 40 cal revolver to add to the fun. I was amazed that there are none. None I could find, anyway.

I saw a reference in a magazine article to .40 being one of the original calibers the Colt Old Army was produced in, but that’s it. Just that one mention.

Anyone know of any in production?
I think the civil war was the reason we jumped from the .36 cal ball in revolvers to the .44 cal as the main stay. The Army needed more power to break up cavalry charges (horse shooting not just man stopping) and .50cal was to large to get in a reasonable size six shot revolver.
The Walker had already proven the bore size against the Comanche and Apache and the Besimeyer steel process had made smaller size revolvers in.44 cal safe and practical . The Walker was made of iron not steel and so had to be huge to most of time contain the pressure of 44 cal heavy loads. It was not practical or very safe for the Army Cavalry and officer use. Many Walkers blew up cylinders from the heavy charges of black powder I have read.
I wonder if a .44 could be lined to .41 cal safely. It would certainly be a might thin barrel liner I'm thinking so probably not safe or practical.
 
Last edited:
They sort of did, but you have to look at early cartridge guns. Is not the 38/40 projectile .401 diam? So they came up with the cartridges dimensions from boring through C&B cylinders and just changing the easy bits e.g. "the barrel", maybe the 36cal is/was just too underpowered, the larger the lump of lead the harder it hits.
Actually, the 38-40 aka 38WCF is derived from the 44WCF, which was a rifle cartridge before pistols were made for it. It had no direct connection with C&B.

And that's enough talk of cartridge guns, which is outside the scope of this forum.
 
With a cap `n ball, it would be fairly easy if you could find someone to reline or rebore the barrel.

I've talked with my gunsmith about doing a .40cal unmentionable conversion but we never got to the point of measuring to see if it would actually fit. It would be some kind of modern iteration of the .41Colt.
 
Like @azmntman said, you could certainly have one made. Doesn't take much to punch a .38 out to a .40, and .38 is what the ".36" cal revolvers are. Maybe Lodgewood could help or @45D might have some suggestions.

TDM, I checked out the 40cal and the lower end loads are safe but the muzzle energy is lacking . . . 😉!!!

(tiny bit o humor 😄) Anyway,
I'm sure it would be a "cool" mod to end up with a .40cal cap gun . . . and why not, Sam had one!!!! Along the same line. I had a customer years ago send a Walker that had been changed to .36 cal. He said it was definitely a SCREAMER!!! So, changing calibers is definitely not new. It's not something I would take on but they are interesting.!!!

Mike
 
As popular as 40 cal rifles have been and having built one recently for myself, I started looking for a 40 cal revolver to add to the fun. I was amazed that there are none. None I could find, anyway.

I saw a reference in a magazine article to .40 being one of the original calibers the Colt Old Army was produced in, but that’s it. Just that one mention.

Anyone know of any in production?
A dozen is a sacred number. Twelve tribes of Israel, Twelve Tablets of laws for the Romans, Twelve months of the year, twelve jurors and so on.
A Twelve bore is pretty popular. Twelve ball to the pound. Two dozen ball to the pound is .58, four dozen .44 and eight dozen, .36
Can’t prove it but I think this was part of caliber size popularity
.40 doesn’t fit in.
 
Back
Top