PDA

View Full Version : A revolver only a mother could love, Chiappa Rhino



tampam4
04-02-10, 23:35
Fires out of the bottom cylinder vs. the top one. What do you think?

http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/2010/01/21/chiappa-rhino-revolvers/



http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/chiappa_01.jpg

http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/chiappa_03.jpg

http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/chiappa_04.jpg

http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/chiappa_05.jpg

http://www.gunsholstersandgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/chiappa_06.jpg

Armati
04-03-10, 00:05
This pistol layout has been around for some time. I have always wondered about it. Not the prettiest pistols - esp by American standards. After all, we gave the world the 'six-gun.'

Looking at that lockwork - WoW! Rube Goldberg went crazy with the AutoCAD.

RNorris
04-03-10, 07:19
+1 on the lockwork comment. Wow. I consider myself a "revolver guy" and this is just the ugliest most unwieldy looking thing ever.

Robb Jensen
04-03-10, 07:29
Wow the only thing uglier than that is a camo SIG P250.

zpo
04-03-10, 08:32
Well, for a full size gun, it might be useful in recoil control... But, a snubbie? Really? Your gonna conceal that?

ETA: Just imagine the cankles you'd have after ankle carrying that for a week...

DacoRoman
04-03-10, 09:53
I'll go out on a limb and say that that is one bad ass looking revolver...and talk about low bore axis, that bore axis is downright subterranean. I like the innovative approach. It looks very ergonomic. I like how they've made an attempt to flatten the cylinder. It looks like a big behemoth though.

Good comment about the Rube Goldberg trigger mechanism.

What market are they going for though? Hunters? Competition shooters? Because ultimately it may be a solution in search of a problem.

zpo
04-03-10, 09:57
Its gonna end up in many SyFy movies. Many.

yallknowho
04-03-10, 12:46
savage looking revolver mate.

jaxman7
04-03-10, 13:15
Am I looking at this thing right? The hammer is the rear sight? That's just weird. At least it appears to be in the fourth picture. Take a look at the fifth picture (the cutaway) though and it is obvious that the rear sight is separate.

W.E.G.
04-03-10, 13:17
http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd7/rkba2da/humor/never_be_unseen_macro.jpg

tampam4
04-03-10, 13:44
Am I looking at this thing right? The hammer is the rear sight? That's just weird. At least it appears to be in the fourth picture. Take a look at the fifth picture (the cutaway) though and it is obvious that the rear sight is separate.

from what i can tell, the hammer is notched as a rear sight, but you also have the groove running down the top of the revolver.

John_Wayne777
04-03-10, 14:46
I'd actually love the opportunity to run one seriously for a while. I love revolvers in general and the good ol' revolver could certainly benefit from a bit of modernization.

SmokeJumper
04-03-10, 14:59
Interesting. Would be fun to shoot one a bit and be able to say you had the opportunity.

EzGoingKev
04-03-10, 15:03
To me why change it?

I compare the mechanism on that to a standard revolver and see more chances for something to go wrong.

DocH
04-03-10, 15:07
Yep. Only a mutha could love that!:eek:

Nathan_Bell
04-03-10, 15:17
Interesting concept. If the low bore axis mitigates muzzle flipping while recoiling as much as one would think I can see some niches. The centerline of the bore has to be at least 3/4 and inch lower than on a comparable revolver.

Good on them for thinking outside the box.

MadDog
04-03-10, 19:28
For those of you asking about the hammer doubling as a rear sight, the hammer does not move in double action mode. The internal hammer functions all by it's self when shooting double action. When shooting in single action mode the external hammer acts like a cocking lever and when released it moves forward into rear sight mode. It has been said this design produces almost "no" muzzle rise and very gentle felt recoil. We shall see.

MadDog ;)

jaxman7
04-03-10, 20:19
Ah thanks for the clarification MadDog. I read the article too and, well time will tell.

Alpha Sierra
04-03-10, 21:47
To me why change it?

I compare the mechanism on that to a standard revolver and see more chances for something to go wrong.

+1

Smith & Wesson set the standard in 1899 and nobody has been able to exceed it yet. Certainly not these upstarts.

threeheadeddog
04-04-10, 16:31
Wow. Not comenting at all on the design other than to say its nice to see another option.

But really? Saying that something like the revolver with its aging roots is beyond evolution, because it is by someone other than a company with american revolver history is a bit much dont ya think?

bobdavis
04-04-10, 17:16
Its gonna end up in many SyFy movies. Many.

The Rhino looks like a remake of the Matebe, which shows up in the anime clasic, "The Ghost in the Shell". Good flick. The guy with the Mateba takes heat from his friends for carrying a 6 gun in a world of hi-capacity pistols. Good flick.

Avenger29
04-04-10, 18:18
I think Jayne Cobb would approve of one...


I'd love to play around with one of these, but would not attempt to carry it...

orionz06
04-04-10, 18:35
I really love the concept of it, and the fugly-ness makes it more likeable, but I cant see spending any amount of money for it.

ChicagoTex
04-04-10, 18:37
The Rhino looks like a remake of the Matebe, which shows up in the anime clasic, "The Ghost in the Shell". Good flick. The guy with the Mateba takes heat from his friends for carrying a 6 gun in a world of hi-capacity pistols. Good flick.

He's also easily the most human of anyone in Section 9, the vast majority of whom have had their entire bodies replaced with cybernetic counterparts. The fact that he carries a revolver when his co-workers carry autopistols is a brilliant (and very deliberate) analogue of the attempt to retain his humanity.

http://i102.photobucket.com/albums/m102/alandp/togusa_2.jpg