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| Registered User | Info on a "gift gun" I know some of the history of Rohm revolvers, but can anyone tell me if a Rohm Rg .38 "spezial", which has NEVER been fired, is worth adding to my safe(I know better than to use it as a CC piece)or should I "kill it"? It has a 4'' barrel, "made in Germany", SN 153xxx, plastic handle and the gun looks black(?) with a copper colored swing arm for the cylinder. This is a family hand down, so I can't really get rid of it, but don't know if I shoot shoot it either. Still have the original box and paper work in German. Looks like its 30-40 years old, if not more. It also looks like it was made yesterday. Any thoughts? |
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member | In the 60's and 70's, Rohm (R.G.Industries) produced inexpensive revolvers for the American market, they were considered cheap crap at the time. I knew someone who had one in .44 magnum, it was functional enough. I fired it once, it had a ten-ton trigger pull and horrible plastic grips that made the recoil painful . Your unfired heirloom should be safe to shoot, I doubt if it's worth much. In the condition you describe though, who knows? People have collected odder things and gotten excited over having the 40 year old box, etc. Last edited by Taurus Fan; 04-10-2008 at 10:34 PM. |
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| | #3 |
| Senior Member | Might be an OK shooter, but I wouldn't trust my life to it. I think Rohm is German for "turd", isn't it? I can say this, because I have a Rohm RG-10 .22 short revolver that was my grandpa's. I guess he had NO taste in handguns whatsoever.
__________________ What she doesn't know about, doesn't piss her off..... |
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| | #6 |
| Senior Member | I have seen enough Rohm revolvers that were not safe to shoot that I have banned them from my pistol shooting classes. Break off the firing pin and use it for a paperweight. Last edited by rfc357; 04-11-2008 at 11:06 AM. |
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| | #7 |
| Senior Member ![]() | |
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