.44 Colt Explained

.44 Colt
Origin:United States
Type:Revolver
Service:1871–1873
Used By:United States Army
Production Date:1871–1940
Case Type:rimmed straight
Bullet:.451
Base:.456
Rim Dia:.483
Case Length:1.10
Length:1.50
Rifling:1:
Primer:large pistol
Bw1:225
Btype1:(U.S. Army black powder load)
Vel1:640
En1:207
Bw2:225
Btype2:(factory load)
Vel2:640
En2:207
Bw3:210
Btype3:(factory load)
Vel3:660
En3:206
Bw4:210
Btype4:(original factory black powder load)
Vel4:660
En4:206
Bw5:210
Btype5:(smokeless, Lyman #429185)
Vel5:650
En5:197
Balsrc:Barnes & Amber 1972

The .44 Colt / 11.5x28mmR is an American centerfire revolver cartridge that was produced commercially from 1871 to 1940.[1]

History

The cartridge was developed by Colt's Patent Firearms for use in cartridge revolvers based on the 1860 Army percussion revolver. The cartridge was briefly adopted by the United States Army, around 1871. The Army used it until 1873, at which time it was replaced by the better known and more powerful .45 Colt cartridge used in the recently adopted Colt Single Action Army revolver.

The .44 Colt was made for use in the Richards-Mason conversion of Colt's 1860 Army percussion revolver. The conversion process involved boring through the chambers of the obsolete cap and ball revolvers and adding a breech-plate with a gated loading port to enable them to chamber centerfire metallic cartridges.

This process left a chamber of uniform diameter, with no step at the front. Thus the bullet and the brass case were made the same diameter, .451-.454 in, with a short "heel" section at the base of the bullet of smaller diameter inserted in the mouth of the case, similar to the construction of .22 rimfire ammunition.

Modern .44 Colt ammunition is dimensionally similar to .44 Special with regard to bullet diameter and case width, the main exceptions being the shorter case length and smaller rim diameter.[2]

Ballistics

The original .44 Colt loading used a heeled, outside lubricated bullet. The major diameter of the bullet was approximately the groove diameter (.451 in) of the converted ".44" cap and ball revolver. The smaller "heel" at the base of the bullet was sized to fit inside the brass case at approximately .430 in.[2]

Upon firing, the ductile soft lead bullet (alloys of pure to nearly pure lead were used) allowed the base of the bullet to "bump up" to first the chamber diameter in the cylinder, then jump the gap, through the forcing cone into the rifling. This is effective with black powder, but less so with smokeless powder. Alloying the lead with tin or antimony to harden it makes this nearly impossible. Use of hard alloys typically leads to poor accuracy.

Benet cup and Martin-type primers were later replaced by more reliable Boxer type primers.

The ballistic performance of the original .44 Colt is comparable to the .44 Remington, and less powerful than modern .44 Russian loads. Cases for the modern .44 Colt-chambered handguns are typically made using trimmed .44 Magnum, .44 Special, or .44 Russian brass and a historically inaccurate .429 lead bullet. (As opposed to the older "heeled bullets" with a larger, .451 in diameter outside lubricated bullet.).[3]

Commercial black powder and smokeless ammunition remained available until around 1940, by which time the .44 Colt had been entirely supplanted by more modern handgun cartridges such as the .38 Special and .44 Special.

The modern sport of cowboy action shooting has stimulated renewed interest in obsolete revolver cartridges like .44 Colt and, for the first time in nearly 100 years, commercially produced .44 Colt ammunition is available. Brass is available from Starline and can be made by trimming the length of .44 Special cases.[2]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Barnes, p.169, ".44 Colt".
  2. Book: Taffin, John. John Taffin

    . John Taffin. The Gun Digest Book of the .44. 13 November 2006. Gun Digest Books. Iola, Wisconsin. 0-89689-416-9. 267–268.

  3. http://www.sixguns.com/range/cartridgeconversions.htm sixguns.com