Re: Hunting Revolver---BFR?? Ruger??
Ruger Bisley, hand down. I have sent tens of thousands of rounds downrange from Ruger single actions with the Bisley grip and a couple thousand through various BFRs. I own Rugers...the BFRs all belong to someone else, and there is a reason. The BFRs are very good firearms (they are- after all- nearly clones of the Rugers), but the average accuracy of those I have shot has not equalled that of the Rugers. I also feel that the Bisley is <span style="font-style: italic">much</span> more comfortable to shoot with thumper loads. (I've shot both guns chambered in 475 Linebaugh and even though the Bisley was <span style="font-weight: bold">24 ounces</span> lighter than the BFR, I would rather shoot the Ruger.)
Get a set of Bowen sights for your Bisley, slim down the factory grips or replace with Gunfighter grips, trim the mainspring, polish the innards to a mirror finish (or if you're uncomfortable with that and unsure what areas to leave alone, just do a toothpaste action job), install a Wolff trigger return spring, and you have a revolver with a feel and action that rivals most custom guns. The trigger pull on the Bisley Vaquero I use for long range shooting is 12 ounces and I never touched the sear engagement, so it is as safe as when it left the factory (as long as you keep your finger away from the trigger when you don't want it to go bang!). It still has a strong enough hammer fall to pop military large rifle primers, so it is 100 percent reliable with any pistol primer on the market. With a stout load of LilGun and a 325 grain WLN hand-cast slug, my Bisley Vaquero produces groups at 100 yards that can be covered with your palm (unless you've got really small hands
). Of course, I have to be holding my tongue just right, but it has printed three inch groups at 100 yards often enough to prove to me it's not a fluke. Penetration and wound channel with this load must be seen to be believed.
Happy hunting, brother!