In the world of personal defense, that’s not a good thing. The lack of trigger satisfaction doesn’t affect the handgun‘s accuracy, but it makes range practice something of a chore. Until the hammer finally, grudgingly, falls. The more you pull the Undercover’s trigger, the heavier it gets. Weebles may wobble without falling down, but revolver cylinders should rock steady.īy the same token, a duty revolver’s action should be like driving into a wall. Closer inspection revealed a not-entirely-unexpected, entirely unacceptable amount of cylinder wobble. The little snub-nosed bastard was shaving lead and spitting it back at my face my right cheek was singed by a spray of hot metal. the cylinder wasn’t lined up with the barrel). I have every reason to believe that the testing and evaluation Undercover. The Undercover is a compact weapon of body mass destruction. Combined with the double-action revolver’s extra grooves, the Charter Arms Undercover delivers astounding accuracy at higher velocities. They also say the manufacturing process leads to less bullet deformation. The Connecticut company claims their mastery of the pull-broach technique ensures that their revolver barrels are better than their competition at sealing the hot gasses created by the primer and gunpowder.
So all hail the revolver’s eight-grooved pull broach-rifled barrel. The Undercover’s sights are bog standard with a fixed front sight, and a rear sight milled into the top of the receiver. Only I’d already punched the paper in double-action mode.
The collection of dots in the target’s center (at twenty feet) was so well-gathered that Adam at American Firearms School challenged me to repeat the feat using double action. I’m pleased to report that the Undercover is one of the most accurate. But a recent experience with the Charter Arms Target Mag Pug left me wondering if a reasonably competent shooter equipped with any of Charter’s products could hit the broadside of a barn.
As a rule, I don’t worship at The Altar of Tight Groupings (great band).