

I'll apologize right now for those on dial-up!!!

Here's my collection of Colt C&B clones:

From the top left, a Pietta clone of the Colt 1836 Paterson:

Top right, my Armi San Marco Colt 1847 Walker Dragoon clone:

Second row, left - my Uberti Colt 2nd Model Dragoon clone (the sidearm of my nickname here):

Second row, right, an Uberti-made Colt 1849 Pocket Model:

Third row, left, an old Uberti (1966-ish) Colt 1851 Navy:

Third row, right, a Centennial (Belgium-made) Colt 1860 Army:

Bottom row, left - an Uberti clone of the 1862 Pocket Police:

Y2K owns the last one, and also has his own Navy, a "Wild Bill Hickok engraved variation. Here are the "dueling Navies":

And a close-up on Y2K's:

Now how about some C&B revolvers Colt should have made?

Top right, a 1851 in .44 (versus the standard .36), called the "London" model:

Middle row, a stainless-steel (bright) Pietta called the "1863 Sheriff"

And bottom, an Pietta 1860 Army in a "snub-nose" configuration:

Rounding out my Colt C&B clones are a pair of conversions (so, technically these aren't C&B revolvers, but I didn't think you'd mind). Here is a picture of the pair:

Top left, an Uberti-made 1851 Navy sporting the Richards-Mason conversion. This one fires .38 Colt and .38 S&W Special fodder.

Bottom right, an Uberti-made Colt 1872 "Open-Top". This was more of a transistion model, made at the factory for use with cartridges, but using up a lot of 1860 Army parts.

Of course, we all know what they introduced the following year. 1873 saw one three of the most celebrated guns of the old west brought into production - the Colt Single Action Army (Model P, or "Peacemaker"), the Winchester Model 1873, and the Trapdoor Springfield (new manufacture, not retrofitted guns). But those are pictures for another day!
I am going to have to get out to shoot some of these really soon!!!
