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สรุปเนื้อหาที่เกี่ยวข้องr ohmที่มีรายละเอียดมากที่สุดในROHM RG10 Worst Gun Ever Made !!!

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ที่เว็บไซต์Pop Asiaคุณสามารถเพิ่มข้อมูลอื่นนอกเหนือจากr ohmเพื่อความรู้ที่เป็นประโยชน์มากขึ้นสำหรับคุณ ที่เว็บไซต์popasia.net เราอัปเดตข้อมูลใหม่ๆ ที่ถูกต้องให้คุณอย่างต่อเนื่องทุกวัน, ด้วยความปรารถนาที่จะมีส่วนร่วมอย่างเต็มที่กับผู้ใช้ người ช่วยให้คุณบันทึกข้อมูลที่ถูกต้องที่สุดบนอินเทอร์เน็ต.

เนื้อหาเกี่ยวกับหัวข้อr ohm

น่ากลัวที่จะยิงปืนพก RG10 อันนี้สั้น .22 ไม่รู้ว่าตัวอื่นจะเป็นยังไง แต่นี่มันตัวเมีย ลิงค์ของฉันยิงมัน 🙂

รูปภาพบางส่วนที่เกี่ยวข้องกับเอกสารเกี่ยวกับr ohm

ROHM RG10  Worst Gun Ever Made !!!
ROHM RG10 Worst Gun Ever Made !!!

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#ROHM #RG10 #Worst #Gun.

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ROHM RG10 Worst Gun Ever Made !!!.

r ohm.

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44 thoughts on “ROHM RG10 Worst Gun Ever Made !!! | อัปเดตใหม่r ohmเนื้อหาที่เกี่ยวข้อง

  1. Randall Rosser says:

    I owned a Rohm RG10s revolver in .22LR caliber as a teenager growing up in Wyoming. I purchased it from an older brother who was in need of ready cash. If memory serves the asking price was the princely sum of $25. This would have been around 1970 when I was 15 or 16 years old. I used it for the occasional plinking and target practice. One quickly learned not to stand beside whomever was firing it as it shaved lead. You would be hit by tiny particles of lead that stung your face. For several years it was the only handgun I owned. I made a holster for it from a piece if scrap leather. The holster was not a thing of beauty, but it worked. I would take it camping. When you are miles from nowhere a .22 is better than nothing and it gave some peace of mind. Eventually the revolver went on long term loan to my father. After retirement he would go on road trips, and it wanted something for self-defense. When my father passed-away in 1984 the revolver went missing. I have my suspicions about who took it, but nothing could be proven. Sadly, this person is still with us and sucking up perfectly good oxygen.

  2. Joe Blow says:

    I've had mine for 40 years and never had trouble with it I think that you're telling a fib these little guns are great for what they was intended for and I don't know where you getting the loud as a shotgun they barely as loud as I high powered pellet rifle as far as the spider and all that goes it barely has any powder in it so how are you getting all this blowback out of it magic bullets

  3. longshorts3 says:

    I have two of these little gems. Sort of difficult to find .22 Shorts these days, but some surface now and then. A low quality gun, but when handled correctly it can be a close range killer. The one you have is worn out, probably will not lock up which is why you get "burned" by the cylinder not aligning with the forcing cone on the barrell and the cylinder being loose in the frame allowing unburned powder grains to escape rearward past the non expanding case, perhaps the cylinder bulges in one of the chambers. BUT, when the revolver is not mishandled, or ammo is not overpresured, these little revolvers can last a long time.
    This revolver is made solely as a "belly gun". At close range, accuracy is not a big factor, anything beyond 10' is considered to be "long range". this RG was made with this thought. This revolver was made as a last ditch defense against assaults in the street. the loading gate was made of cheap zinc (some called it "pot metal") only made to retain the cartridges inside the cylinder as it rotates. I would only carry this revolver with an empty chamber under the hammer. As a pocket pistol, the size makes it ideal, small, little outline inside a pant pocket. The ejector rod screwed into the tube the cylinder rotated on to keep the price down. It is what it is, perhaps a throw away, or throw down revolver as its job is completed. It was used in post war Europe for assassinations which were common during the time of the Soviet Union. The ones that were not imported had no serial number imprinted on the frame. The large front sight was to hold a suppressor in place. The steel barrels were not polished after the rifling was added, some had smooth barrels. The revolver was chambered in many rimmed calibers, some European, some American. I possess this revolver in several calibers .22short, .22LR, 32 Browning, .38 Special, and I hear .45 Colt (very rare). Early ammo was smokeless powder with corrosive Berdan chemical primers which is probably why yours is so loose and inaccurate. Back in the day, if the revolver was not cleaned promptly, pitted barrels, forcing cones and chambers set the norm. Of all that I own, the RG 38 is still tight, the barrel, forcing cone and cylinder unpitted. They can be repaired to almost new condition if you want to spend the money on one, but the one you have is not repairable because it was extremely cheap. Between Brownells and some other companies, you might find a push ejector that screws into the cylinder and stabilizes the cylinder from missing the forcing cone. The Rohm is a curiosity, certainly not a dependable self defense revolver. I think my RG 38 cost $25-30 when new back n 1980. My Series 70 Colt cost $149 New back in 1978, so that will say something about how price increases over the years have hamstrung gun owners today.

  4. peter zwegat says:

    In case you are still wondering:
    Röhm was (and is) a german chucking tool company. The O or Ö in your Röhm logo shows such a drill chuck. Good german cordless drills like modern Bosch Professional models use for example Röhm drill chucks. Röhm produced weapons (blank guns, signal guns and normal handguns) from the 50s until 2010. That company which produced the weapons was called RG. After 1968 they started a company in Miami (RG industries) which run until 1986. To the first of January 2010, the german Röhm GmbH sold their weapon companies to the german company Umarex – which produces Röhm RG Blank pistols and other licenced models like Walthers, Glocks,… to this day.
    Personally – I think your gun is so shitty, because its an early model of a gun, produced by a tool company that started to produce cheap blank and signal or starter guns for the german/ european market and thought they can easily expand their line with sharp models of their weapons for other markets.

  5. nolo cotendre says:

    Congrats on posting a VERY funny vid! I've had experience with three (3) of these things: 1) purchased new for a grandmother. We guys could shoot it OK but she didn't have the finger strength req'd 2) purchased new for a wife. Shot pretty well when we tested it 3) purchased used. I looked it over and discovered a bullet stuck in the barrel. Pushed it out and fired into a woodpile. Some time later the guy who'd purchased it took it to the range and the thing blew-up. The cylinder wasn't counter-bored for rebated rims and the round under the hammer burst at the rim out, blowing it out, causing additional rounds to discharge.

  6. Jizzy The Froggy says:

    , often referred to as , is a German brand of firearms and related shooting equipment. RG developed as a diversification of Röhm GmbH in the 1950s. Following a 1968 US division,  was established in Miami and lasted until 1986. In 2010, the RG brand was acquired by Umarex GmbH & Co. KG. Röhm's RG-14 handgun, used in an assassination attempt on then US President Ronald Reagan, was referred to in 1981 as a saturday night special, a cheaply manufactured firearm of perceived low quality, believed at the time to be favored by criminals.

  7. Adam Finley says:

    Cylinder stop is broken. The shrapnel and blowback is because the cylinder and barrel are not lining up properly. Thank goodness it is chambered in .22 short, any larger caliber would've blown up in your face. People…it is EXTREMELY IMPORTANT to know about the workings and mechanics of ALL firearms you own, or plan to own. This guy could've been seriously injured or killed because of lack of basic knowledge of a double action revolver.

  8. paul solfelt says:

    My 1970s marksman repeter bb gun pistol is more accurate than that p.o.s , my girlfriend just found one in a bucket of stuff her ex had when he was alive, someone discarded it in a trash pile that was on there cabin property when they were building it, the trigger is rusted in place witch is a good thing it will never be used again, just a sovenier reminder of the past, LOL !

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