Recreational shooting

Such a beauty. My Taurus TRACKER. This particular model comes with two cylinders. One chambered in .357. The other cylinder is chambered in .9mm. This is my recreational shooting gun. I take this to the range to practice specifically with distance, aim and accuracy. I believe becoming proficient with larger handguns in the long run makes it quite easy to handle your standard semiautomatic pistol. The recoil in a revolver is quite difficult than a pistol. -MM #RSGC

I’m intrigued by that particular model.

Fun calibers and adequate for self defense.

Do you use moon clips?

The tracker 692 comes with interchangeable cylinders.

I think BeanCounter was curious about what the mechanism is that ejects rimless 9mm brass from the cylinder?
I know I am.

Don’t most revolvers that fire rimless cartridges use moon clips? The ejection system should act on the moon clip to eject the cartridge cases

Until Ruger introduced the LCR in 9mm, I’ve always thought 9mm was a semiauto only cartridge. Pardon my ignorance.

You live in Ca…nevermind, we forgive you :grinning_face:

Touché :grin:

Thank you for the information. I’m not a big revolver person, and didn’t know this

A moon clip is included because it can use 38 caliber as well. To be clear, this particular model, the 692 tracker comes with two different cylinders. One for 357 and one for 9mm. You can use the moon clip to use 38.

The Taurus .357/9mm is a great revolver, for any reason. I have an old Taurus 450, .45 Colt. I don’t think it is supposed to shoot.45acp. but I can use moon clips and shoot the .45acp, no problem. I’ve been doing it now for about 20 years plus. Thousands of rounds. Some pretty hot I can do the same thing with my Taurus public defender, although it is not supposed to do that. Love those Taurus Revolvers.