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I'm curious about any experience anyone has with these revolvers.
Are they reliable?
How well made are they?
I've never heard anything bad about them but when I mention Charter Arms I do get the occasional Meh.....
I purchased a new .38 stainless undercover, (snubnose), in the late '90s. The crane locked shut when I fired the first five rounds of .38 wadcutters. It was locked up until it cooled. I filed a little metal off the area on the frame to the rear of the cylinder. I lightend the trigger pull and over five years fired about 1000 rds through the gun. It was accurate and fun to shoot and had less recoil than the lighter Smith. I never trusted it for self defense and sold it and purchased a Smith-Wesson 642. I regret selling it though.
 
I'm curious about any experience anyone has with these revolvers.
Are they reliable?
How well made are they?
I've never heard anything bad about them but when I mention Charter Arms I do get the occasional Meh.....
I've had one in .38 Spec for many years. 2" bbl in SS. I seldom carry it anymore but it has always been completely reliable. I did take it on a hog hunt when I lived in California and used it to shoot a hog that I had shot with a muzzle loader. It has always worked well for what I have used it for. I now keep it in the house in case of a home invasion. It will certainly shoot minute of bad guy within the confines of a house.
 
I had a .44 Bulldog with the barrel cut to 2" and the sight reattached. I don't understand why they don't make them that way as it was great. I carried it in my pocket in parks that had bears. I can't remember the load but it was a 180 grain flat nose lead at an honest 850-900. It did save my bacon from a rabid dog.
 
I'm curious about any experience anyone has with these revolvers.
Are they reliable?
How well made are they?
I've never heard anything bad about them but when I mention Charter Arms I do get the occasional Meh.....
I have 6 of different vintage 2 1st generation in 22 LR 1 in 22 WMR second generation 1 38 spl 1st generation 1 44 bulldog in SS 3 inch 1st generation and a 32 H&R mag current generation.
The early ones were the best both in fit and finish,the new ones are OK not as well done as the early ones but I have not had any problems with them. They are the ony Mfg that have 9MM/40S&W and 45 ACP revolvers that need no moon clips
I would recomend them but as any new Revolver some folks have had a few problems with the current crop.
Charter arms will take good care of any problem period.
 
I bought a charter arms Patriot 327 federal mag several years ago. I have noticed they have been discontinued not sure why but i just flat love mine. I did a lot of looking before buying. The Ruger sp101 was better finished i believe stronger, but a lot heavier. The charter is so handy 4 inch barrel a ton of power lightweight accurate everything i was looking for. I know many will laugh but it is the first handgun i grab from my safe next to a Ruger 22 //45. I have a real liking for 32 caliber firearms. when they first came out i purchased a Bisley model single six in 32 mag. I picked up a Ruger black hawk in 327 fed. real nice revolver but heavy and i have a hard time getting used to it having more than 6 rounds. I also bought a Smith and Wesson 32 mag. 2-inch revolver. that has become the one i put in my pocked before walking out the door. and it does have 6 shot instead of 5 for 38 j frame.
I like the 32 mag. so much i converted a shotgun into a nice single shot 32 mag rifle. used a take-off barrel cutting the old chamber off lining the shotgun barrel, chambered and built an extractor (that was the hard part). just to add on to my 32 caliber fetish i will list a couple more. i have a custom Schuetzen rifle by CPA arms, and stevens model 44 both in 32/40. A Uberti copy of the low wall in 32/20 a real nice shooter accurate and just about no recoil. a 32.20 smith and Wesson and half a dozen 32 acp. revolvers. Darn i started this to mention my 327 federal Charter arms and went off. well anyway you might think I like 32 caliber firearms.
Joe in Eastern Washington state not the crazy west side that hates the bill of rights and loves taxes.
 
I have a couple of older Charter Arms revolvers, a stainless Undercover in .38 Special and a blue Undercoverette in .32 S&W Long.
I realize that they are not the same quality of my S&W revolvers but they are pretty good and I do carry each of them occasionally.
Both of mine are older models made between 1964 (1st year for Bridgeport models) and 1988 (last year for Stratford models).

I am looking to add a .44 Special Bulldog but only an early pre 1989 model.

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Birth are nice looking pistols. About like the Taurus from that area. Which were good also.
 
Charter has always made a decent 'blue collar' revolver.

They've had their QC ups and downs over the years but the old Bridgeport guns are excellent; and friend I trust say their current Charters run fine. I've owned a half-dozen Charters over the years, mostly Bulldogs, and have no complaints with any of them. Any time I needed a random part for one, they sent it free of charge.

Among their current offerings, I like the flat black 45 ACP and the Pathfinder.
 
I'm curious about any experience anyone has with these revolvers.
Are they reliable?
How well made are they?
I've never heard anything bad about them but when I mention Charter Arms I do get the occasional Meh.....
My 38 Undercover needed a little massaging from the factory. At he peak of collecting I had over forty handguns. Add about twenty more over the years. My experience has been that I've had more issues with lower priced firearms. I gave up on them. Once a firearm has an issue I do not trust it for self defense. Once I did my thing on the litle Charter it was fun to shoot, accurate and was a good looking little gun.
 
I learned at a very young age that low end guns aren’t the best use for your gun buck. As young teen I bought many new H&R and IJ .22 revolvers. I wasn’t old enough to purchase myself, got old man to pick them up. This was early 60s. Everyone likes to have a .22 handgun to play with. At the time there were a lot of WW2 bring home guns that I swapped a H&R .22 revolver for. I didn’t want the those guns either. I would in turn take them to gunshow and roll them into something that was useful to me. I was a hunter not a gun collector. That’s how I built a good portion of my gun collection, the Dung Beetle School of Gun Trading.
 
Cheap guns have their place as a cheap Rossi .38 saved my bacon among other parts one night. Charter's are among the hardest revolvers to work on as I work on all of mine. Disassembling and reassembling the cylinder needs 5 hands and parts will shoot across your shop and land in the 5th dimension. LOL , I got where I would only do it working in a cardboard box. That said , They are sound reliable revolvers for the most part.
 
Had a Wiggington Volt meter in leather case on my belt that saved me from getting mugged. My hand on the case run them off. They thought it was a holster. Lucky for me I didn’t have to fire my volt meter.
Is that how cheap guns save guys bacon.:poop:
 
I want them to build a Bulldog in 2" exactly like the 3". I mean keep the front sight. I had one custom done a long time ago and with the Undercover grips and grip adapter it was a great pocket gun.
 
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