Charter Arms 1st Generation Bulldog 44 Special Review

Revolver

Charter Arms Bulldog

Charter Arms Bulldog 2.JPG

Charter Arms Bulldog .44 Special with 5 rounds

Type Revolver
Identify of origin Us
Production history
Designer Doug McClenahan
Designed 1971
Manufacturer Charter Artillery
Produced 1973–present
No. built More than 500,000
Variants 13520, 14420, 7352, 74420 and 74421
Specifications
Mass 21.viii oz (620 thousand) and xx.1 oz (570 one thousand)
Length 6.7 inches (171 mm) and 7.two inches (184 mm)
Butt length 2.2 in (55.9 mm), 2.5 in (63.5 mm),[ane] 3 in (76.ii mm),[two] or four.2 in (106.seven mm)[3]

Cartridge .44 Special or .357 Magnum
Caliber .44 or .357
Action Traditional double-activeness or double activeness only
Charge per unit of burn Unmarried
Muzzle velocity Usually between 705–1,000 ft/s (215–305 m/s); tin reach one,100 ft/s (340 m/s) with some kinds of bullets.
Feed system five or half dozen-round cylinder

The Bulldog is a 5-shot traditional double-activity revolver designed by Doug McClenahan and produced past Lease Arms. It was introduced in 1973. The Bulldog has been available for the .44 Special and .357 Magnum cartridges. It was a top-selling gun during the 1980s and it is considered to be Lease Arms' trademark weapon.[4] It has been produced by 4 different companies since it was released.

History [edit]

Designed by the founder of the first version of Charter Arms,[5] Doug McClenahan,[half-dozen] the Bulldog was released in 1973. It was one of the all-time-selling weapons of the 1970s and the 1980s in the United States.[vii] Its design and execution, which were quite modernistic at the time, defenseless the attention of the gun printing and combat shooters.[8] By the mid-1980s, more than one-half a 1000000 units had been produced and near 37,000 were being manufactured every year.[7] Bulldog product has been stopped a few times since 1992, when Charter Arms, the original manufacturer, went bankrupt.

Some time later on, manufacturing began again under the Charco (descendant company of Charter Artillery) trademark. This company also filed bankruptcy, and the models produced during this catamenia showed obvious production flaws.[9] It was produced again by Charter 2000; this company, which failed besides, improved the weapon with a one-piece barrel, front sight, and ejector-shroud assembly.[five] The original model had no ejector-shroud and the aluminum front end sight was soldered to the butt.

In June 2007, a version of the Bulldog with new features[6] began to be produced by another company named Charter Artillery,[ten] but this time was distributed by MKS Supply.[xi]

The Bulldog was used by the serial killer David Berkowitz aka "The .44 Caliber Killer" and the "Son of Sam" who was responsible for a serial of attacks and murders in New York Urban center during 1976–1977 (earlier he was defenseless due to an outstanding parking violation).[12]

The name "Bulldog" was a homage to the original Webley revolvers of the same name.

Description [edit]

Older production Charter Arms Bulldog in .44 Special

Like nigh Lease Arms weapons, the Bulldog is a relatively inexpensive nonetheless serviceable, no-frills,[five] snubnosed revolver.[x] Information technology was designed to be concealed hands because of its pocket-sized size, yet also fire a "big bore" caliber.[10] The Bulldog has no sharp edges to contend with when carrying the weapon in a holster or a pocket.[6] The Bulldog is a solid-framed traditional double-action revolver with a five-round cylinder which tin be opened by pushing a release slide on the left of the gun, or in the original model past pulling the ejector rod. It features a concave sight.[vii] Its trigger pull, in both single and double-activity modes, is quite light.[5] If a large quantity of balance piles upwards inside the revolver considering of heavy usage, the cylinder crane'south axle screw tin be removed and the cylinder pulled out from the gun for cleaning.[half dozen] Most critics believe the best employ for the Bulldog is self-defense.[6] [9]

Performance [edit]

The accuracy of the Bulldog is aided by its trigger pull. According to reviews, it is more accurate than expected for a revolver of its size and blazon[v] but probably not enough to be called an "accurate" weapon.[half-dozen] [9]

When the gun is fired, the hammer does not actually strike the firing pin. Under normal firing circumstances a modest steel bar (chosen a transfer bar) is raised as the trigger is pulled, placing it into a position between the firing pin and the hammer itself. The falling hammer strikes the transfer bar, which in turn strikes the firing pin, discharging the weapon.[6] If the trigger is not beingness pulled when the hammer falls, the transfer bar will non exist in position and the weapon volition not discharge.

Armament [edit]

The Bulldog is obviously intended for light, fast bullets, every bit with heavier and slower bullets it is less accurate.[5] With nigh ammunition types the muzzle velocity tends to be between 705 and thou feet per second (215 and 305 meters per 2nd, respectively).[10] [thirteen] For self-defense the Blazer 200-grain (13 g) Golden Dot is, apparently, the load of choice for the Bulldog.[13] If the Bulldog is used to hunt, the most constructive ammo is, reportedly, the 240- or 250-grain (16 g) SWC. With this bullet blazon, the shot is very powerful and has a strong penetration but the recoil tin can easily be handled. Other ammo types are weaker or provide too much recoil.[thirteen]

Models [edit]

Five models of the Bulldog have been produced, assuasive customers to choose betwixt: .44 Special and .357 Magnum cartridges, gun lengths of seven.2 inches (184 mm) and half dozen.vii inches (171 mm) and barrel lengths of either 2.5 inches (64 mm) or two.ii inches (56 mm).[14] [xv] All Bulldog models take a cylinder of v shots.[7] As of 2007[update], Charter Arms only offers its 14420, 74420 and 74421 versions.[15] Charter's Police Undercover could exist considered a Bulldog variant considering it is produced with the aforementioned frame model but its caliber is different and it was built to resemble the Undercover by Charter.[xvi]

Variant[14] [fifteen] Caliber[fourteen] [15] Length[fourteen] [15] Barrel length[14] [15] Weight[xiv] [fifteen] Capacity[7] Grip[14] [xv] Hammer[14] [15]
Model 13520 .357 Magnum 6.7 inches (171 mm) 2.2 inches (56 mm) 21.8 oz (620 g) 5 Cyl Full Regular
Model 14420 .44 Special seven.2 inches (184 mm) 2.v inches (64 mm) 21.8 oz (620 chiliad) 5 Cyl Total Regular
Model 73520 .357 Magnum six.7 inches (171 mm) 2.2 inches (56 mm) twenty.1 oz (570 k) 5 Cyl Full Regular
Model 74420 .44 Special 7.2 inches (184 mm) 2.v inches (64 mm) 20.1 oz (570 thousand) 5 Cyl Full Regular
Model 74421 .44 Special seven.2 inches (184 mm) ii.5 inches (64 mm) 21.eight oz (620 g) five Cyl Total Double action only

References [edit]

  1. ^ "14420 Bulldog, Blueish Standard". Lease Arms.
  2. ^ "34431 .44 Special Archetype Bulldog". Charter Artillery.
  3. ^ "74442 .44 Target Bulldog with 4.two" Barrel". Lease Arms.
  4. ^ Williams, Dick. "Pocket Protectors". Guns and Hunting. Archived from the original on 2008-03-12. Retrieved 2008-04-04 .
  5. ^ a b c d e f Quinn, Jeff. "Charter 2000 .44 Bulldog Pug". www.gunblast.com . Retrieved 2008-03-xi .
  6. ^ a b c d e f chiliad Trzoneic, Stan (January 2008). "Lease Arms Bulldog Pug – A classic .44 returns to production, with several CCW-friendly enhancements". Guns & Ammo. Archived from the original on 2008-03-04. Retrieved 2008-03-07 .
  7. ^ a b c d e McNab, p. 74
  8. ^ "Lease 2000'southward Bulldog Shows Why Experts Liked .44 Special". www.gunweek.com. Archived from the original on 2006-11-xv. Retrieved 2007-ten-xv .
  9. ^ a b c Chris Luchini and Norman F. Johnson. "Charter Arms Bulldog". rec.guns. Archived from the original on 2008-03-ten. Retrieved 2008-04-04 .
  10. ^ a b c d "The Gun Zone - Lease Arms Bulldog Pug". www.thegunzone.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-21. Retrieved 2007-10-28 .
  11. ^ "MKS Supply Partners". www.mkssupply.com. Archived from the original on 2007-x-16. Retrieved 2007-10-28 .
  12. ^ "David Berkowitz". world wide web.allserialkillers.com . Retrieved 2007-ten-fifteen .
  13. ^ a b c M.50. McPherson. "Charter Arms 44 Special Bulldogs: Care and Feeding". www.levergun.com . Retrieved 2007-x-fifteen .
  14. ^ a b c d due east f thou h "Bulldog parts and prices" (PDF). www.charterfirearms.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-08. Retrieved 2007-ten-fifteen .
  15. ^ a b c d east f g h i "The Bulldog from Charter Arms". www.charterfirearms.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-14. Retrieved 2007-ten-15 .
  16. ^ "The Law Undercover from Charter Arms". www.charterfirearms.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-eleven. Retrieved 2007-10-25 .

Bibliography [edit]

  • Chris McNab. Atlas ilustrado de Armas de fuego (in Spanish). Susaeta Ediciones. ISBN84-305-5801-2.

External links [edit]

Media related to Charter Arms Bulldog at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website

cloudablat1994.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charter_Arms_Bulldog

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