As the proud owner of a Taurus 85 Polymer in eggshell white, I can say with some confidence that this is not the worst revolver ever made. 😂 Thanks for the video!!
@harleyboy65 Жыл бұрын
You own a white polymer Taurus, you are a God sir
@johngraesser4911 Жыл бұрын
I have the 605 poly in baby poop brown, it is my goto pocket gun when not wearing a belt holster, or as backup when carrying something higher cap.
@pajamabloodfart Жыл бұрын
Sweet. Does it have green grips?
@CarolinaRimfire Жыл бұрын
@@johngraesser4911 Glad it's been working for you! The baby poop color helps with accuracy, I hear! 😂
@CarolinaRimfire Жыл бұрын
@Terras I think the worst thing about Taurus handguns is the finish. I like to give them a hard time online sometimes, but I've actually never had a malfunction with any of mine. Can't say the same about my Canik.
@kfeltenberger Жыл бұрын
It might be the worst to the rest of us, but if it all you have or can afford, it's the best gun in the world.
@sootch00 Жыл бұрын
If it goes bang when you pull the trigger, you have an option. Thanks Kurt!
@kfeltenberger Жыл бұрын
@@Gabthar I hope you are never in a position to be proven how wrong you are.
@Chris_the_Dingo Жыл бұрын
I have one. Trust me, it's a piece of crap. I'd rather have brass knuckles or a good knife.
@eddie10191 Жыл бұрын
Nobody is that broke. 1 shift at a waffle shop could get you a 9mm.
@randyblackburn9765 Жыл бұрын
It’s a piece of junk , the larger calibers will shave lead and throw it in your face .
@steveisgood2go Жыл бұрын
It shot with no malfunctions. I’d say it’s pretty good
@marcusmartinez5454 Жыл бұрын
How does a revolver malfunction? I mean maybe a light primer strike(but that could've very well been the ammo itself), but other than that, there isn't exactly a whole lot of moving parts for a revolver to "malfunction".. Unless you're meaning like, the fact it didn't break or explode lol
@sealteamsix1784 Жыл бұрын
i don't have much experience with guns (living in a nanny state country), but i shot a .50ae desert eagle once, and it jammed multiple times in one magazine... i would have been much safer with this..
@rickhunter6513 Жыл бұрын
@@sealteamsix1784Desert Eagle gets a bad name mostly because the people who are shooting it are using the wrong type of ammunition or not holding it properly.
@MrHalonoob117 Жыл бұрын
@@marcusmartinez5454 misaligned cylinder or wiggle in the cylinder, crane stress or breakage, hammer jumping the sear, improper cylinder spacing, spring breakage, trigger doesn’t properly reset. These are only a couple examples of potential revolver malfunctions
@lalli8152 Жыл бұрын
@@marcusmartinez5454 There are many ways revolver can malfunction, and the bad thing is with revolver if something goes wrong its usually more difficult to fix than with semi autos
@billhoppe2991 Жыл бұрын
Really a fun video Sootch. When me and my wife were first married 54 years ago, we didn't have much money. Bought an RG blued 22LR/22 Mag revolver for $49 brand new at the Minneapolis Sports Exchange. It looked good from a distance. Fired it once or twice. It made us feel better in our basement apartment. Bought a S&W Model 28 years later and the guy gave me $25 on trade in. Thanks
@sootch00 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Bill!
@brittakriep2938 Жыл бұрын
@@sootch00 : Not long ago in the german arms magazine,Visier' this revolvers Clerk, Röhm and a third one had been noted and compared in an article about very cheap revolvers. Yes i am german, and my Revolver is for law reason bending pointing finger and shouting ,Bäng'.
@sammartinez8084 Жыл бұрын
I have a r.g and it works great 👍👍👍👍
@peternorth1721 Жыл бұрын
Stuff like this is unreal. My first pistol was a Taurus. For nearly $500 because Obama was president. They say “kids these days have it easy.” 😂 nah lol
@timd729 Жыл бұрын
I would have given you at least $40 for that Rohm revolver. That gun store ripped you off lol but then again this was probably a long time ago. Those RG 22LR Revolvers go for around $100+ on gunbroker.
@joedlf3618 Жыл бұрын
Sootch doesn’t discriminate cheap pistols ! Love to see cheap pocket pistols reviews
@user-sw9jo7fe3d Жыл бұрын
I bought one visiting my family in rural Georgia..this was in the early 70s. Small country store with the revolvers hanging by nails on shelves behind clerk..I was 12 and paid $30..no questions asked. Still have it in original box..
@harryjacobson1002 Жыл бұрын
Fills a niche indeed. Reminds me of my mother-in-law's H&R model 923 ("Camper" with 4" barrel), given to her by her late husband in the 1950s for protection. Served as her nightstand gun. At age 89 she decided to fire it for the first time. I took her to the range. That little gun worked just fine, and she could consistently hit minute-of-pie plate at 7 yards from her walker!
@markedman3990 Жыл бұрын
Lol...great comment. Thanks for making me smile! 😊
@gregb6469 Жыл бұрын
It's good that she never needed to use the gun seriously.
@shadowwolf9503 Жыл бұрын
My Mom, almost 80, has a H&R 9 shot revolver she keeps handy. I gave it to her 30 years ago to replace the RG 10 22 short revolver she had. Mom gets it out once in awhile and shoots some cans with it. And she is a pretty decent shot ! Years ago, I was 7, Mom used the Marlin 22 rifle that Dad had just gave to me, to run off a guy trying to break into our house late one night. He tried to get in through my bedroom window, and then our backdoor. She warned him she had a gun and would shoot. When he ignored her and kept pushing on our door, Mom put a 22 round through the door. That changed his attitude ! Lol. When the police got to our house, they listened to Mom's story and looked at the bullet hole In our door. One of them told her "Good job. If he comes back- do it again !".
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
The cheapest gun in the H&R line is roughly 100 times better than this piece.
@Chris_the_Dingo Жыл бұрын
H&R made some decent guns. These Clerks things are certifiable junk. I have one, but I'd be scared to fire it.
@canewalker41 Жыл бұрын
I knew a pistolsmith from Keithville, LA back in the 70’s thru mid 90’s and he told me that Bo Clerke made his target .45 acp barrels. I said, “the maker of the Clerke 1st???” Jim Clark was the pistolsmith. Jim said Bo Clerke was a top notch machinist and target grade barrel manufacturer. Jim said that he asked Bo how he made any money having to repair so many guns under warranty! He said Bo’s response was that he did’t repair the pistols ... he REPLACED the broken guns with a new gun. He said it was cheaper that way. His cost per unit was $7.95 to manufacture and he sold them to stores for $14.95 (dealer). Stores usually sold them for the suggested retail of $19.95. As per another statement about the 1968 GCA, it was drafted after Robert Kennedy (US Attorney General at the time) was assasinated in California by a man named Sirhan-Sirhan. He used an RG .22lr to kill Kennedy. Among one of the “heinous” features of what was called a “Saturday Night Special” back then was any handgun with a melting point of under 1100 degrees Fahrenheit. Since Clerke’s alloy fell under that stipulation the US government closed that part of Bo’s business. John Hinkley used two RG .22lr pistols to shoot President Regan, Jim Brady (his press secretary) and a NY City policeman. Jim Brady’s wife (Sarah) gave us The Brady Bill to avenge what was done to her husband. John Hinkley was recently released from the mental institute he’d been kept in since shooting these people. He never served one day in prison and now he walks among us as a FREE MAN!!! Justice HELL.
@johngraesser491110 ай бұрын
Years ago, and perhaps even now, some states had what was nicknamed the frying pan test. Put the gun in a frying pan and heat it up, if it melted, it was banned. The goal behind this was to disarm poor people that couldn't afford a colt saa or 1911. Later on it was used against the early polymer guns since they would melt as well. Then glock became a standard and melting guns was a forgotten test. Everytime a person knocks zamac pistols, it is fun to mention that glocks melt as well.
@unclebuck1735 Жыл бұрын
From your demonstration it shoots every time you pull the trigger.......far better than the brand name 22 pistol I recently bought.
@Waldherz Жыл бұрын
@Terras Glock 44 cough cough.
@chicagomike2111 Жыл бұрын
Having shot both the Clerke and the Rohm, my vote for the worst goes to the Rohm GR10. I felt so much blow back from the Rohm I thought I held it backwards..lol
@shadowwolf9503 Жыл бұрын
I use to collect the RG 10 revolvers. Ended up with several of them. I'd pick up one or two of them at every gunshow I went to. Got them for $20-$35 @. I fired most of them, using CCI 22short CB caps. In single action- pretty reliable. Double action- somewhat iffy. My first pistol, when I was 12, was their big brother, the RG 14. A double action 22lr snub nose. I guess that's why I have a soft spot in my heart for these underdogs.
@timd729 Жыл бұрын
They don't sell em at gun shows for $20 to $35 anymore... How long ago was it since you bought your last one?
@shadowwolf9503 Жыл бұрын
@@timd729 Around 10 years ago. I had a nice collection of the RG's. One was a RG 10 new in the box. Had all the paperwork, a full box of 22 shorts and the original receipt. I bought it from the original owner. He was an older neighbor of mine. Oh, the revolver even had fake mother of pearl grips. I ended up selling the entire collection to a friend of mine. I quit going to the gunshows. The prices started getting real stupid. And , the ATF started sending in undercovers. They were entraping sellers. Setting them up on BS charges. But between the prices and the alphabet guys, it took all the fun out of going.
@jamesslick4790 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a cop in the days when the 4" S&W M&P (Model 10) "skinny barrel" was THE duty weapon for city police (1930s-1970s). He drilled in to me that in any defense scenario involving a revolver was to ALWAYS shoot double action and leave the single action shooting to the "fancy bullseye boys". LOL. He got me my first gun, also a .22! But it was a Marlin Model 60 that he bought at KMart! I still have it!
@fksarver Жыл бұрын
It is hard to beat a Marlin model 60. I have never had a Ruger 10/22 that could match it.
@jamesslick4790 Жыл бұрын
@@fksarver Almost 50 years of use, with normal maintenace (actually, not great maintenance early on, LOL) and still "goes bang". I call it the BEST "Blue Light Special". I just had her out last week for some old school plinking! (I named her "Kay" LOL) 👍😊👍
@johngraesser4911 Жыл бұрын
Can't be the worst, it seems to go bang everytime you pull the trigger. My guess would be the Rohm rg10, .22 short and terrible reliability.
@Mibit911 Жыл бұрын
I have a Rohm rg10 in 22 short I got from my grandmother and it is indeed worse, can't hit a piece of paper at point-blank, the trigger reset broke after a few rounds, the front sight is a cover that slides over the barrel I had to glue back on. It's absolutely awful
@bradfordpalmer2298 Жыл бұрын
That's what i was thinking. I bought a new Barrerta 21a. And it goes, boom, click, click, boom, click. Oh, but it's cute.
@Mibit911 Жыл бұрын
@@bradfordpalmer2298 so I have a beretta 950bs minx and I thought the bs stood for bullshit because the magazines always had issues. It was in 22 short. I fixed my feed ramps with a tool specifically for those mags and it fires perfect now everytime
@C.RWells Жыл бұрын
I got me a rohm rg10 22 short for 80 bucks at a local gun store figured if it don’t go bang I can sell it at a buyback for 300. I got lucky and it’s a pretty decent little quiet trap line gun
@bbo40 Жыл бұрын
I got a Rohm .22 short and ; yea that is the worst !
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
What a blast from the past! A friend had one 50 years ago and we literally could not hit a sheet of plywood until we were within 20 feet, and then the bullet hit sideways and stuck in the wood. Usually it was like shooting blanks because we could not tell where the bullets were going. After wasting a few boxes of ammo the top strap snapped and that was it. So we hung it on a stump and shot it with a 30/06 from 75 yards or so. It disappeared in a cloud of powdered metal; we could only find tiny pieces here and there. They are a great gun for someone who wants to be armed but will never fire the gun. I have an old Iver Johnson in mint condition that a relative bought new in 1915 along with a box of Peters semi-smokeless .38 S&W ammo. When I inherited it in 1973 I got the revolver, which was loaded, and the box of ammo with 5 rounds missing; they were the ones in the gun.
@sunbeam8866 Жыл бұрын
And the Iver Johnson is probably 100 times better than this thing!
@joeyhardin1288 Жыл бұрын
My second revolver, back then was an RG. The guts fell out of it and rattled around in the frame. I called to get it fixed, the lady told me to drop it off a bridge into a river or sink it in a lake. Seriously. I gave it to the sheriff. Thank you. God Bless and stay Safe.
@erroneous6947 Жыл бұрын
I had a charter arms undercoverette in .32 S&W long. It was a cops backup gun. Smoothest action and trigger I’ve ever shot. It was probably 40 yrs old when I got it and was well used. Good gun wish I still had it.
@cray9868 Жыл бұрын
What does that have to do with this gun review-? 🤔
@Banditrider74 Жыл бұрын
I just had a funny flashback... I recognize this revolver because here in Germany the were produced and sold as starter guns that were resricted to fire blanks only (these type of guns have blockages in the barrel and cylinder so no bullet can pass through). The Röhm gun that he is referring to also was available as a blank firing gun. I myself owned a .22 blank revolver very similar to this gun in the video a long time ago - and it worked quite well except for the loading / unloading process. The model I had was black and even had an internal drop safety that prevented accidental firing (not that blanks in .22 cal are very dangerous...). This video brought back some funny memories. ;-) Greetings from Germany!
@leodanryan966 Жыл бұрын
The Clerk was actually assembled in the garage of a man named Henry Taylor in San Antonio, TX. I actually saw him assemble them. He actually made a 1 lb harpoon gun for marlin fishing as well. It also came in. 32 caliber.
@BankonJovan9 ай бұрын
Funny you say that..I just found my granfathers clerke helping my grandmother move tonight in SA...
@Mibit911 Жыл бұрын
I have an rg10 in 22 short that I got from my grandmother, she left it to me because her mom had it untill she passed and bought it in a detective magazine, she apparently scared a burglar off with it one time but never shot the thing except into the ceiling lol. She kept it in a roll down desk, and it had an old box of Remington 22 short with it. Actually heard a story from a guy whose dad was killed with an rg10 the burglar loaded it with 22lr cut down. And I tried that and it did fire fine. The double action on mine broke as the trigger will never really reset anymore, and even at point blank you can't even hit a piece of paper, the front sight is just a plastic xover on the barrel I had to glue back on lol
@josephpacchetti5997 Жыл бұрын
The definitive Saturday night special, speaking of the Rohm-RG, I had someone that wanted me to check theirs out, and it was bad, cylinder was out of time and was unable to use, I advised them not to try and fire it, the Clerk is better than a handful of pea gravel, Thanks for posting Don. 🇺🇸
@joaopedrobaggio4475 Жыл бұрын
This gun can't even scary a clerk of a gas station, but if the only gun that you can have, it's better than nothing.
@johnqpublic2718 Жыл бұрын
You wouldn't be concerned, at all, if a methed-out criminal points this in your face at 2am while you're simply trying to finish your shift?
@jackjohnson291 Жыл бұрын
@@johnqpublic2718 I’d be concerned if someone threatened me no matter what is in their hands. If it’s a deadly weapon of any sort, it just might be the last thing they do. I take my safety seriously, as should everyone.
@DronesUnder2A Жыл бұрын
I'd be scared to fire it with that wiggly chamber
@DronesUnder2A Жыл бұрын
@@johnqpublic2718 he's probably trying to scare the clerk at the gas station and that's the best he has.
@northernninety7 Жыл бұрын
Id rather have nothing than to put one oz of trust into it and be sorely disappointed when it fails to stop an attacker. If I whip out a $20 fisher price inspired gun then I deserve to get robbed.
@Ammo08 Жыл бұрын
I have one in 22 LR. My wife inherited it when her Dad passed away. Still in the box. Apparently he traded a truck starter for it.
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
Leave it in the box! Best place for it.
@Stillmaineiac88 Жыл бұрын
Growing up, my Father had one of these in .32s&w short. Ours was a later model made in Florida, and the quality didn’t improve over the years. The one time I brought it to the range, I never got more than two rounds from each turn of the cylinder to go off. Never the same two chambers but, no more than two. The best thing about that pistol was the really nice leather holster paired with it!
@cameronking3551 Жыл бұрын
This is definitely better than the Rohm revolvers.The fact that it's a starter pistol that shoots live rounds is cool and nostalgic since I have not even seen a starter pistol since 1999 in middle school.
@Jesses001 Жыл бұрын
I used to have one of these. Got it super cheap because the trigger was not resetting. I was able to fix that with a pen spring. Worked great after that. I gave it away to someone who had nothing. Defiantly better than nothing levels, ha. I wish someone would produce something similar to this. As long as the quality control can be kept, and some minor modifications, I think it would be good for the super poor to have something that works. Is it good? No, it really sucks, but I rather had a sucky gun than a sharp stick, as long as it is a reliable gun.
@donnawells2442 Жыл бұрын
It goes bang every time. That’s more than the new model Python could claim.You didn’t know if it was going to go off or not. Wouldn’t want to be on the other end of it. SHOOT SAFE!!!!!!!!!!!!
@kevinkoepke8311 Жыл бұрын
I cleaned a .32 version for a friend. It was his mom's. Definitely a saturday night special.
@dustytables3638 Жыл бұрын
I had to chuckle when I saw this video, I hadn't thought about this three legged dog of a handgun in decades, brings back a memory. I've been collecting for 50 years, always prided myself on going for the highest quality I could afford. Of course I have my share of 'hand me down' items inherited from dead family members, some of dubious quality others are quite nice. But the Clerke revolver......this thing has to be the biggest POS I've ever had the dishonor of coming into contact with! Seems my Father came up with one of these back around the mid '90's or so. Nickle plated as well, chambered in .32 S&W short. I was out at his place and he produced this pot metal whiz bang to see what I thought of it. Now my Dad liked firearms but not like me, he was just an accumulator not a collector. My first impression was probably the best. It looked like a revolver. My opinion went downhill from there. Cheap arse construction, seemed to be held together with hopes and prayers and butt ugly to boot! After firing a handful of rounds I determined that the safest place to stand when shooting this was in front of the barrel about 20' out. As long as you didn't move about, you were good to go. Anything or anyone off to the sides or directly behind this lead spitting thing was fair game! Due to a manufacturing process known as 'Random Tolerance Technology', Clerke's were made with a hit and miss system of cylinder chamber holes to barrel alignment that was astounding!! Most shots more lead would 'zing' out to the sides of the cylinder gap or bounce back into the shooters face! After about 5 minutes of this I asked my Dad if wanted to trade me this vile thing for a real gun. He demurred but I insisted. Gave him a nice S&W M10 snubby, took said lead spitting devil (aka Clerke) to the barn and gave it a smart rap on an anvil with a 9 pound sledge. Thing flew apart into about 8 pieces. Life is too short to putz about with bad guns.
@joemorris3617 Жыл бұрын
we called the RG's..."Real Guns" in High School, my buddy carrying one like a bandito in the waistband
@KingNukem211 Жыл бұрын
I inherited one from my dad. Thanks for the video! It definitely is a cheap gun, but I still keep it around
@SevenSixTwo2012 Жыл бұрын
It's simple, cheap, holds up well and it works reliably. In fact, it seems to work better than some of the much more expensive contemporary handguns with issues. What's not to like?
@ewelinanajgebauer886210 ай бұрын
Guessing it's the looks, or the reputation of Saturday Night Specials. I mean, i have a cap gun(which, fun fact, you could probably easily convert one to .22, prolly wouldn't last long, depending on if it'd be .22 Short, Short Rifle, Long, or Long Rifle) that looks really close to this, and it is broken(trigger and indexing both don't work), plus the looseness of the cylinder, quality issues, all of that would probably combine into a bad reputation. Another guy fired a Lorcin .380(one of the worst semi-auto SNSes apparently), and it barely jammed, so, there's that.
@michaelshaffer9051 Жыл бұрын
I have the little mod. 23 RG 22lr. It has shot very well only gave about $150 for it always found it to be a hilarious little gun but it shoots very well!
@pogeegitz Жыл бұрын
At first, I thought it WAS a starter pistol - it looks just like the one my grandpa had. He was a track coach.
@armandolopez8983 Жыл бұрын
I walked a foot beat in Santa Monica in the 70's and went into the factory. I spoke to the workers and I was going to buy one but when I saw it close up I changed my mind. Factory was off Main Street near the Santa Monica Tourist area on Main Street.
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
Good move!
@eb-ol4poАй бұрын
Fun fact: those snap caps you used to dry-fire the gun are worth more than the gun itself 😆
@johnschofield9496 Жыл бұрын
I took one on trade back in the late 80's. It was disassembled, in a coffee can, with a box of ammo minus seven rounds. Yep, it broke on the 7th round. GOOOOOD stuff !
@BertReno Жыл бұрын
i really like the grips. They look nice and respectable
@adamschrader328 Жыл бұрын
That little gun probably saved the lives of many low income grandmothers. 💥💥💥💥
@JohnPublic-dk7zd Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the bottom line is very few folks enjoy having any gun pointed at them, and to most bad guys that quick glance down the barrel, why, it's a S&W .357, or similar...the whole psychology of bad situations would almost insist that every gun pointed, from either direction, is automatically assumed to be a model 29, and dirty what's his name is holding it on me...! that little, shiny .22 is a hand cannon...
@patrickmcwilliams69610 ай бұрын
It fired every time you pulled the trigger. On double action! I could never get one to do this. Mainspring breakage is common. I did get the first one I ever bought out of a box of toys at a flea market. A friend dropped one and it shattered into little pieces. Lock up was always tight. The big problem comes if you don't remove the mainspring correctly. There was a successor, the Serrafile Terrier. Quality of parts was not as good. I have the only example made in .32 rimfire, which I built myself. Became very familiar with assembling and working on them. There were 5 and 6 shot versions in both .22 and .32. Around 1976 there was a black finish version which came in a Bicentennial themed box. The 32 firing pin had to be carefully fitted or it could puncture a primer. I blew one up that way. The RG is much better made, but a lot more difficult to work on. The Raven has always been reliable in my experience but it breaks firing pins easily. The Jennings J-22 has a poorly fitted extractor. I don't think Jimenez corrected that and that's why they jam all the time. There is or was a video on youtube on how to fix that. The starter Clerke had a shortened cylinder.
@ajwilson605 Жыл бұрын
It has the same fit and finish as a Christmas gift I received in 1961..... A Mattel "Fanner 50".....
@davidkohler7454 Жыл бұрын
I bought an RG years ago. It has been fired 100,s of times. Double...single action. Revolver. It's all Pot metal with a steel sleeve barrel. It's never malfunctioned on us. My wife keeps it in her night stand .she also has a Mossberg with pistol grip between the bed and stand. My side has a Scorpion Evo, and an AK on the back of the closet door. I wouldn't want to get shot with ANY of them.
@everettcussler525 Жыл бұрын
By the first minute, it seems to shoot flawlessly. I know of expensive guns that would fail at least three times by that shoot count...
@lens7859 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for showing us! Never heard of them
@uclajd Жыл бұрын
A working revolver for $20 doesn't sound like a poor design to me. A great example why gun controls laws don't work.
@JerryEricsson Жыл бұрын
Years ago, when I first started my police career, the Department had a little .22LR revolver that we used for putting dogs and cats down when we were asked to destroy animals by the public, or that had been in the pound for 3 days or longer. The hand broke on it, and the Chief was going to have it cut up and put in the trash, so I asked if I could just have it to play with. He gave it to me. Come to find out, it had belonged to my brother-in-law who worked on the PD back when I was in High School years before. Anyhow I fixed the hand spring and the little gun was my carry while I was in the US Army for 3 years after quitting the PD. I carried it (illegally I guess) throughout my assignment to the Washington DC Area with The Old Guard at Fort Myer as my car gun. It was a Herbert Schmidt and just a bit higher in the quality scale than the Clerk. Blued with white grips, it held 6 22LR rounds. Never had to use it but it was comforting to know that if I needed it, it was there for me. I finally sold it for 35 bucks when I needed a carton of smokes and was short of funds. They didn't pay us cops very well back then.
@gmac8852 Жыл бұрын
Nice drop gun.
@williamowings6857 Жыл бұрын
I actually find inexpensive, less than ideal firearms fascinating. Welder-Machinist by trade. So in way can afford to and it's not like I need to care about "devalued" playing with modifications and experimentations to learn new stuff. Just a cheap gun nobody else wants. And that tells me more accurately what I should want and be willing to pay for because either the tools and/or tech knowledge makes more sense to buy or just bull shit marketing and something else is better or just as good more in line with what I can afford without buyers remorse. Never heard of this before today. Appreciate the video. Not going to lie. Everytime you said Zinc I flinched. Zinc makes weak pennies that metal on a wood burning stove. Unless I'm wrong 22LR is a 9000psi explosion. Somebody must have consulted a kid with a cap pistol that converted it to a zip gun like my half crazy Father-in-law did as a kid to figuer out that math. But I guess it works. That's intresting to know of for some hypothetical reason that's the best I can aquire. But...damn. Takes a lot more brass balls or insanity to shoot with a pot metal gun at some point. I doubt they invisioned rugged continued use of it though. But I agree. If it goes bang reliably and gets the job done. Then it was or is good enough if not an ideal choice. I have a bunch of less than ideal stuff in my shop and fascinated by air rifles too. Building a new one now. And bullpups. Basically if someone hates on something I kinda want to know why and if it can be fixed regardless of the fact others have already tried. It doesn't hurt anything and I learn from it. Gun Control is a myth. They aren't that hard to make. But like anything a universal tool is almost impossible. Leatherman got close with the pocket multitool. But it's still not perfect. Just really convenient and carry one everywhere.
@tinkertalksguns7289 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for showing this; we don't get to see a lot of guns of this ilk.
@someguy325es Жыл бұрын
“This is the worst revolver ever made! But the fit and finish isn’t bad. And the trigger is pretty nice. And it’s reasonably accurate. And the sights are well regulated. And it functioned perfectly. But it’s the worst firearm ever made!” No sir, the worst firearm ever made is one the doesn’t work.
@rickey5353 Жыл бұрын
Seems like a good and reliable pocket revolver to me.
@bobconnor1210 Жыл бұрын
Maybe close to “America’s Worst”. It will be remembered that the infamous RG was a piece that initiated the Melt Test associated with the ‘68 gca era definition of “Saturday nite spl”. You could not leave it in a hot car without damage, the metallurgy was so bad.
@huskylvr4evr Жыл бұрын
Never saw one of these until this video and now a few days later, a local dealer has one listed for sale. LOL
@derp-construction3341 Жыл бұрын
The best gun in the world is the one you have to hand when it is needed.
@jld3229 Жыл бұрын
They wear quickly, I used to hear it was the, "1000 round wonder". I agree with your assessment Sootch.
@ksw3155 Жыл бұрын
She's prettier than my Rohm and seems more reliable...lol. they are interesting revolvers and I always enjoy seeing them...thank you
@iansamson973 Жыл бұрын
You're a great guy thank you for your time
@normanmccollum6082 Жыл бұрын
I dunno, it doesn't seem all that bad to me. Yeah I don't like the wobbly cylinder when it's outside the revolver but the most important thing is that it functions properly when it's stored away with ammo. Also I think a clever addition might be to have a stretchy attachment between the cleaning rod and the barrel or down at the front of the trigger guard. The revolver that comes to my mind as a contender for the worst ever made is the German Reichrevolver which somehow was adopted 6 years after the US adopted the M1873 Colt SAA yet was basically an entirely inferior revolver. From what I can recall, it was single action only, had no extractor so it came with a wooden peg to retain... somewhere... for when in need for reloading, ah yes and also it had a manual safety which of course revolvers really don't tend to have and I did some research on the round it fires. It is less potent than .45 ACP with ACP coming out with at least 20% more energy with the lowest-energy loading on Wiki which appears to be basic 230gr ball ammunition, meanwhile .45 Colt seems to have at least 50% more energy. Still better than .22lr, for sure, but I think the total lack of a ramrod on the Reichsrevolver, and I just watched a 'Minute of Mae' from C&Rsenal about the 1880s version of the Reichsrevolver, and she says the hammer is 10% lighter but still she tends to want to use her second thumb to pull back that heavy hammer, and she describe the trigger as 'smooth and heavy.' So yeah it sounds like this .22lr revolver has a better trigger than the Reichsrevolver. Looks like the Germans take the cake here, at least in my opinion, for the worst revolver I am aware of that has ever been made. I'd consider the M1895 Nagant revolver to be a contender too. Damn that double-action trigger is HORRENDOUS, and the mid-'40s (so one of the last ones ever produced) M1895 Nagant that I owned and not long later sold, had a double-action trigger that seriously like 30-60% of the time just... would not engage with the hammer. The trigger would pull, the cylinder would spin, and the hammer would just be like 'nope! Gonna lie down RIGHT here...' meaning its reliability for the double-action revolver was horrendous. I don't recall if it worked more often than it didn't, or if it failed to cock/drop the hammer more often than it succeeded, but it happened A LOT and I'd regard it as an unbelievable, surprising miracle to somehow be able to get through a whole 6 or even a full cylinder of 7 rounds with the double-action trigger/hammer working every time. You could practically play Russian Roulette with that revolver by just using the trigger. Except as I recall, you pull the trigger a BIT, and you instictively know whether it connected or not. Is the trigger horribly heavy, or actually kinda light? If it's light, the cylinder will turn and nothing else will happen. If it's heavy, enjoy the DAMN heavy trigger squeeze before the handgun goes bang-o. But for a properly-functioning M1895 Nagant, yeah it'd be better than that bloody Reichsrevolver... wow, this is the most I've talked about revolvers in quite some time lol I'm definitely more of a semi-auto pistol kinda guy, but I do like Military firearms. Oh and the Webley is stunning to use compared to either the Reichs or Nagant revolvers. And the M1873 Colt SAA is probably among the smoothest single-actions ever made if not THE smoothest, but I'd still rather a Webley Mk.VI any day. Better ejection, faster reloading, smooth double-action trigger pull available, it's just stupendous. Sadly never did get any .455 Webley ammo, but I'm certain I'd have enjoyed the heck out of it at the range, absolutely. The only WWI handgun I ever had the privilege to handle, but hopefully that won't be a fact for the entirety of my life :)
@davidkohler7454 Жыл бұрын
I have a mint condition Nagant Revolver. I enjoy shooting it. For me, I get the best target groups with it of any pistol I've got.
@mpb929 Жыл бұрын
I bought one of these for 100$ at a gun show years back. Out of all the guns I've bought...this is one of em. Least it shoots, and that's not nothing!
@jonjacobjingleheimerschmid3798 Жыл бұрын
Man! I would have loved this as a kid running a trap line!
@fksarver Жыл бұрын
I checked my trap line every morning before school. I ran a trap line for many years after going to work. Kids today can't imagine all the stuff they missed out on.
@chapiit08 Жыл бұрын
The cylinder is also Zamak alloy with steel chamber liners. Note the keyholing on the target towards the end of the video.
@jeffadams9807 Жыл бұрын
As Long As It Goes Bang & Can Hit It's Target At Room Range, It's A Good Pistol In My Book...
@tlock4616 Жыл бұрын
Runs better than a Jennings J22 I used to have, lol. The rounds, when you could get it to shoot, would key hole half the time.
@77Infidel Жыл бұрын
My brother had a J22. We couldn't get it to shoot a Minute of Soda Can from ten feet.
@patriotpreacher43 Жыл бұрын
Had one many years ago. Couldn’t get it to fire more than one round. Always jammed!
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
Oh, this one will keyhole too if you move back a little bit. We could not hit a sheet of plywood at 50 feet with a Clerke. With my Ruger .22 we were putting 10 rounds in 3" at the same distance. Soon the frame snapped, ending the testing of the Clerke forever. (We then shot it with a 30/06)
@backwoodsjunkie08 Жыл бұрын
Those bryco Jennings were pretty bad guns!
@blackhawk7r221 Жыл бұрын
Standing on a bridge firing down, my J22’s entire slide flew off. The shame was unbearable.
@dalemoss4684 Жыл бұрын
This is what was sometimed called the "dimebag dealer special"
@richardjohnson4238 Жыл бұрын
When I was a very young man, and wanted a handgun, any handgun. I'd see these, RG's, and Ravens at the local Army and Navy Store. I remember them being about $30.00 or so in the early 70's. Man I wanted one. They had the one, absolutely essential feature I had to have. A low price tag. A new Smith and Wesson sold for about $100.00. That might as well have been a million dollars. I had about as much chance of coming up with one, as I did the other. But $30.00? I could at least imagine scraping that together. I never did though. It would be years before I got my first handgun, a Smith and Wesson Model 19, but those little Ravens, RG's and such, helped keep the dream alive. By the way. Going through my mothers stuff after she passed, we found a similar revolver in her dresser. But it didn't shoot anything but those red plastic ring caps. How, when and why she came to have it, no one knows.
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
The cap pistol is a very good comparison.
@paulbeck6410 Жыл бұрын
The number one rule of gunfighting. Have one.
@jimdelarosa9776 Жыл бұрын
Love the way it looks, not gonna lie.
@TheLoneRanger745 Жыл бұрын
Hey Buddy, 🤠 it sure does look odd ball, it shot fine, it hit the target good.(right in the neck) A couple of yrs ago I found three western revolvers as a novelty collection by Heritage Rough Riders 22lrs or 22mag. They have a lot of up grade parts to fancy them up , they are Colt replica's. First the 1865 Cavalry Model 6.5" I added the etch Scrolling cylinder and Scrolling checkered rosewood cocobolo grips, it came with the fake yellowish case hardened receiver (not good) so I refinish with Birchwood blue for a authentic blue/turquoise fire case hardened look it turned out great , second is the 1865 Artillery Model 4.74" I added etch buffalo/indian head cylinder with buffalo/Indian head coins in checkered rosewood cocobolo grips. The third came out in 1877 Gambler's Birds head Model 3.5" I added the etch dead man's hand etched cylinder ( said to be Buffalo Bill Cody's last hand being that he was killed at the card table in Deadwood South Dakota) and checkered rosewood birds head grips, this gun was warn in a cross draw shoulder holster rig by many gambler's of the day including Doc Holliday. It's nice to have a peice of history in your hand watching the cowboy movies. Now they're just a novelty collection for me , but I did take them to the range one time and they shot Very good, I was impressed with the accuracy. I've heard it said the Colt is the most natural pointing gun ever made, I have to agree ! They're Beautiful Guns !
@P_RO_ Жыл бұрын
Between this and the RG10 22 short I'd rather have a dull butter knife. I remember these "Saturday Night Specials" as a kid in the early 60's and some were advertised at $14.99 on sale. "Blue Light Specials" announced 'while they last" in sporting goods at K-Mart. You could mail-order them from magazine ads. Parts broke, springs were weak, and none of them would last through one box of ammo. "Raven" and the other cheap 25's took over the SNS market and weren't much better. The RG14 was 22LR with a swing-out cylinder and better than this Clerke but not by a lot. That one is as low as I'd go with my carry
@SkoshiTiger1 Жыл бұрын
It did go bang every time.
@stuartowens3506 Жыл бұрын
Awesome review, Don! Love it! I would probably buy one if I had the chance…just to say I owned one LOL
@darrellburnside9368 Жыл бұрын
Yea my grandfather was a railroad man and had one usually to kill snakes. The real problem is that the pin is really hard to take out. I don't recommend keeping this pistol loaded because it can be really dangerous to unload with a live round in it.
@phild8095 Жыл бұрын
I never even heard of this before. Compared the the Heritage Manufacturing 22 this is a family heirloom. I used to have a Raven Arms MP-25. Another real piece of work. I see the MP-25 on auction sites selling for close to $200. I don't understand that at all. I haven't seen 25ACP locally in 3 years .
@gregwright392 Жыл бұрын
Idk about worst, it went pew every time you pulled the trigger!
@wlong3868 Жыл бұрын
It did go bang when the trigger was pulled
@474dalton Жыл бұрын
My dad owned one growing up it was always kept in the bathroom as a just in case gun but when he passed away I had to give it to my brother because that is what he ask me to do brings back some childhood memories of me and him shooting it and his had a nail in it as the cylinder pin because it was lost years ago
@cutlerylover Жыл бұрын
I have a SNS thats way worse lol same overall poor quality but single action only 22 short with crazy play and overall maybe 3/4th the size of this one...😁
@jeremiahakerman73338 ай бұрын
The film "Unlawful Entry 1992" brought me here to learn some about this notorious revolver. It was what Ray Liotta's character, Pete a deranged and obsessive police officer used to murder his partner Roy with after ordering the latter to seek psychiatric help or be suspended. Always wondered what type of revolver that was, and I figured it had to be some sort of poor quality "Saturday Night Special". I was sure right about it being notorious and cheap lol, but now I'm much more familiar with the Clerke 1st. Good video as always.
@theshotgunscientists Жыл бұрын
I’ve got one of these, it’s black with black grips. My papaw left it to me when he passed last year. His mom bought it for 27 bucks in 1979. I have a couple videos of it on the channel.
@bisleyblackhawk1288 Жыл бұрын
I inherited one of those from a friend after his passing and you are correct…it IS THE ABSOLUTE WORSE REVOLVER EVER made 🙀🙀🙀…mine has the “trident” shaped end on the cylinder pin and the cylinder lockup is hit and miss to the point of being unsafe to shoot due to lead shaving if the cylinder doesn’t index properly 🫣🫣🫣 (plus it keyholes at 10 ft on every shot)…it will be sacrificed on the alter of a gun “buyback” event if we ever have one locally 😳😳😳
@marcusizayah Жыл бұрын
Yeah I had one of those Rohm RG10’s I always thought of those as the worst revolvers 😂
@kennethhummel4409 Жыл бұрын
I had one, my brother gave it to me back in the 80s. It was in .32 S&W… it broke after I put 3 boxes of ammunition through it! I still have it, I use it as a paper weight.
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
Now your story is more in line with what I experienced. A friend traded a spare tire for one and within 100 rounds the FRAME broke! We hung it on a stump and shot it with a 30/06. It blew into a zillion pieces.
@SCH292 Жыл бұрын
Hey! That's offensive to the paper community. I think it's better if you toss it in a shoe box. 😂
@kennethhummel4409 Жыл бұрын
@@SCH292 that would be offensive to the shoebox community!
@stephenmartin9393 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in the early to mid 1960s there was a guy in my middle school who had a .22 LR made in Germany. I paid $ 10.00 to buy this gun because I had the hots for a handgun and it fired cheap ammo. The gun was essentially made out of pot metal and had at least a 12 lb single action trigger pull and probably a 25 lb + double action. I am sure that this would have had an import ban pre 1968. At 7 yards I doubt that it would keep all six shots on a piece of typing paper. I do not recall it having a front sight, although there may have been one. It had plastic grips and my guess is that the barrel was 2 1/2 , possibly 3 inches. I have no idea what I did with that pistol but your video reminded me of the gun that I had. The cylinder came out to reload it by pulling the center pin. I do not recall there being a loading gate. It had a blued finish but I have no idea as to where it was manufactured. It was the worst pistol that I have ever owned.
@thomasmoje5926 Жыл бұрын
I had the .22 cal. starter pistol version many years ago..it fired .22 blanks and I used it to train my bird dog. As I recall it did not appear to be a substantially made piece; looked rather cheap but it worked for my purpose. Didn't know they made an actual regular firearm version of it.
@christopherjones8149 Жыл бұрын
For something that essentially looks like a dollar store cap gun, it actually works 👍👍👍👍👍
@jakedoesyoutube Жыл бұрын
It doesn't look that bad. At least it's firing every time you pull the trigger. I know revolvers that don't.
@jamesa.7604 Жыл бұрын
Sootch, You deserve a commendation for even attempting to run live ammo through that thing. I'm surprised it didn't fall apart in your hands. Well Done, Sir!
@geraldshrewsbury3121 Жыл бұрын
😂 That sample performed better than my Charter Arms .38 out of the box. 🤣
@jerkygutts8386 Жыл бұрын
I think I might have you beat with the rg14 and Arms Co model 059 (Tennessee) .22lr I have that my grandfather used while float fishing in rivers and creeks in Arkansas for Cottonmouths. He had much nicer guns but with these he had no worries if they got wet or dropped them.
@reelfishing002 Жыл бұрын
I have .22 lr ruger mark 4 lite and the ruger sr , I know these will be what they can handle if needed for self defense for the house
@thomaspalmer7900 Жыл бұрын
I have a Ruger Mark IV target pistol loaded with CCI Stinger ammo. I started to buy a Ruger SR22 recently & ended up getting a Glock 21 instead. Still looking at getting a Ruger SR22
@JohnPublic-dk7zd Жыл бұрын
We have a mark iv, it is a good firearm...we don't rely on it for anything but the range, but in a pinch the gun would help for sure (20 fast and accurate rounds of .22 can always help in a pinch)...
@thomaspalmer7900 Жыл бұрын
@@JohnPublic-dk7zd absolutely!! For PD I carry mostly .45 & .357 magnum
@camilomiranda61 Жыл бұрын
They did actually produce the clerk 1st in black with black plastic grips, I have one and it's pretty terrible at least yours looks decent. Good fun at the range anyway, I got it for 33$
@johnlea8519 Жыл бұрын
I would take that revolver in an instant, living in England where buying a Colt, S&W, Ruger is practically impossible that little.22 would be better than nothing but I would still go to jail if the police found me with it.
@davidmorris4353 Жыл бұрын
Sootch. . .You are a brave. . .brave man! I would have duct taped that to a tire and rigged a string on the trigger before I would have shot it in my hand! I saw one of these things fired back in the mid 70's and it didn't index properly and it was spitting lead out sideways when the bullet tried to jump from the cylinder to the barrel, sure cleared out the firing line! Saw some old fat men grow wings and fly away after the first couple of rounds though. . .I will never forget it!😂
@WafflePlaneRC Жыл бұрын
7:36 "We only had one malfunction and it was just a light primer strike" If that video clip is the malfunction in question, it looks more to me like it jumped timing- the cylinder didn't rotate when you pulled the hammer back, so the hammer dropped on the same cartridge you fired previously. Otherwise great video!
@1776adb Жыл бұрын
Better than a BLUNT stick.😂.
@ludwigmises Жыл бұрын
An owner of this gun might reverse the old expression to: “I might actually be caught dead with this.”
@Negasilver Жыл бұрын
Not a revolver, but the worst gun I ever had was a Remington 522 Viper. I had to polish the feeding ramp and clean up the mags and rest of the gun to a pretty much spotless state to get it to go for more than 2 consecutive rounds at a time, and even then I was averaging like 4 or 5 malfunctions per 10 round mag. Traded it for a Marlin model 60 which I couldn't get to malfunction no matter what I did to it.
@philippevanderborcht1075 Жыл бұрын
Better a 22 than nothing. I liked. I would buy one.
@adamchurvis1 Жыл бұрын
How can you possibly say this is the world's worst revolver while the RG-10 exists?
@sammartinez8084 Жыл бұрын
We have one and it works great 👍👍👍
@navchaps3449 Жыл бұрын
I love this gun. Really makes me thankful for what I have, and I'm a better man for that.
@MrTruckerf Жыл бұрын
It serves a purpose; how does any other gun compare to this? Quite a bit better!
@hendersonbradshaw3098 Жыл бұрын
I like SNSs (for some reason) and have a Clerke .22 just like this one. I’ve never shot it, because as you note, the lockup is so loose, but your video has encouraged me to give it a try. Boy - it screams cheap.
@drmachinewerke1 Жыл бұрын
Needs to be remade but with quality steel. I have a friend with a 32. And ran about 1-k rounds through it with no issues