Well, the S&W 500 looks more like a 45-70 opened up to .500, to me.
That gun weighs 72 oz, or three pounds more then most handguns.
I think that may just be too big for a handgun. 40 oz is a very heavy big gun to carry around.
I'm not sure the extra 30 oz, and size, is worth the benefits of the cartridge. The 500 Linebaugh is real close in ballistics to the S&W. Good news is the S&W will become cheaper then the 500 Linebaugh, once the gun becomes mainstream. Also a custom Ruger cost at least twice what the S&W does.
For me, a 454, 480, or 500 Linebaugh, or 500 JRH on a freedom arms is plenty, and it comes in a very packable package.
I'm waiting to see if they come out with a smaller gun for this cartridge.
I've heard the muzzle brake on this gun isn't worth much, just reduces muzzle flip.
Well, just had a bad day at the range. Used the accurizer tool on some 22 bullets, but, I changed the scope, and spent most of the day trying to get the rifle to shoot to poa, but, since I didn't have my reading glasses,
I couldn't remember which know did which function, and which one went which way. Result was it was terrible at 50, and finally moved to 25.
At 25 it's centered but about 5 inches high.
I did have fun with the 45 Super. Boy, with 230 grain bullets at 1100
fps it feels a lot like a 44 mag, and, with my really light trigger it doubled once on me. Still, very accurate at 25 yards.Double taps, fast fire, about 12" circle, and a few in the 10 ring, slow fire. That's very good for any 45 acp, at that range, I think.
375 still rips hard. Only fired 6 shots, since for some reason, I just could not hold the rifle on target. Maybe too much coffee, or, more likely the
3+ hours of full court basketball just wore me out, yesterday.
gs