Charter arms current reputation?

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brian10x

Member
Joined
May 15, 2018
Messages
543
Location
Tucson
I've been around guns for over 35 years, and always heard bad things about Charter arms.

The thing is, they make the only affordable revolver (that looks any good?) in 32 H&R magnum. The call it "The professional".

Are they any better than they used to be?

Thanks for your input!

Brian
In sunny Tucson
 
OK,...I'll play the contrarian here.

I have owned several Charter Arms products over the years and never had a bad experience. I've owned 3 Undercovers (.38 5-shot), one Bulldog (.44spl. 5-shot) and 2 AR-7s. (Henry makes the AR-7 now, but in the 70s it was Charter Arms.)

In fact, I was impressed with the first Undercover I owned back in the 80s because it held together and didn't blow up in my hand as it should have when I made a serious reloading mistake. Back then, as a poor shmuck earning minimum wage, I was using Lee Powder Dippers to measure out my powder charges, because I was poor. I had loaded up some simple standard pressure loads of 4.2grns. of Herco. The smallest powder dipper held 2.1 grains of Herco,...so 2 level scoops of Herco per case came to 4.2 grains for the desired charge. But what I didn't know was that I goofed, and somewhere in the 100 rounds I loaded up, I lost count and accidentally put in 3 scoops,...producing 6.3 grns. for a charge rated as mid-range .357!!!!

There I was at the indoor range at Shooter's World, just plinking along;...blap! blap! blap! KABOOM!!!!!! I instantly knew what must have happened. But to my shock, when I pulled my hand down from recoiling over my head,...not only was the hand still attached to my wrist, but the little revolver was intact.

So that made a believer out of me, and I have nothing bad to say about Charter Arms. Are they as refined as a Colt or a S&W? No. But they are completely serviceable products.
 
I carried a Charter Arms .38 as a back-up gun for years. I thought of it as cheap and ground off the front sight and hammer spur. I could stand on a traffic stop or suspicious person situation with my hand in my pocket, and nobody knew it held a gun. Then I shot it, about 50 rounds as I recall, and the trigger cut a groove through the cylinder stop and the gun was out of commission. I sent it back to Charter Arms and they not only fixed the problem, but they also put a new barrel and hammer on the gun. I switched to a S&W after that, but I have had a love affair with the .44 Bulldog since it first came out. I don't know how many I have owned, but most of mine got shot a lot and I never had a problem.
If you're going to shoot the gun a lot I probably wouldn't get one, but for occasional use it should be fine.
 
I bought a Professional for a good friend of mine, but that one in .38.
I've had several CA, and currently just two. NEVER an issue with .44, .38, .32 or .22

I bought the Pitbull in .45acp once. It was too much in recoil for me, and it was quickly re-homed.
I've had two of the same in 9mm. The 'original' was a 6-shot. Allegedly they had issues with that one prompting them to revamp it in a 5rd configuration.
They were manageable and fun, and the extractor system worked like a champ. However, neither of them shot POA/POI for me. So, also down-the-pike.
 
Well, count me as one of the lucky ones. I bought the "Professional" and the "Undercoverette" both in my favorite new caliber, 32 H&R magnum. The triggers are acceptable , and this is coming from a S&W man. Accuracy is "good" , not better or worse than my other snubbies. Quality control seems "OK". All in all, nothing to rave about, but no complaints either. Worth it for the price.

I love the company though. They all seem like red-blooded 2nd amendment-loving 'Mericans.
 
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