wmg1299
Professional
I was shopping for a Charter Arms Bulldog because I have been able to consistently find .44 SPL ammo, and it can share ammo with my .44 Mag Marlin 1894. It took a few weeks to even find one in-stock, and I would up paying about $50 more than I would've preferred after taxes/shipping/transfer. I'm still getting alerts from sites where I put the Bulldog on my wishlist, and the prices are now consistently in the $500-$650 range once you include taxes and shipping.
I'm used to modern sporting rifles and semi-auto handguns with magazine capacities over 10 rounds shooting up in price whenever politicians start talking about a ban. I'm also used to to "high" (i.e. standard) capacity mags disappearing from shelves and doubling in price. However, I'm surprised to see 5 and 6 shot revolver prices going up so fast. I'm not aware of anyone pushing to ban revolvers, and ammo for most of the popular revolver calibers are impossible to find on store shelves in my area. Is there a legitimate business reason for revolver prices to go up (ex. increased production cost, material shortage, etc.), or do revolvers just go along for the ride when the gun & ammo markets go nuts?
I'm used to modern sporting rifles and semi-auto handguns with magazine capacities over 10 rounds shooting up in price whenever politicians start talking about a ban. I'm also used to to "high" (i.e. standard) capacity mags disappearing from shelves and doubling in price. However, I'm surprised to see 5 and 6 shot revolver prices going up so fast. I'm not aware of anyone pushing to ban revolvers, and ammo for most of the popular revolver calibers are impossible to find on store shelves in my area. Is there a legitimate business reason for revolver prices to go up (ex. increased production cost, material shortage, etc.), or do revolvers just go along for the ride when the gun & ammo markets go nuts?