Revolvers

Most commonly, such guns have a six or eight go capacity (hence the http://www.gunslot.com/guns/revolvers other John Doe 'six shooter'); however, some revolvers have a capacity of 10-shot on the graduate school end and as deep as 5-shot on the other (this often depends on the caliber, though different companies emolument revolvers in the same calibers with different capacities, due to other delineation differences), and each chamber has to be reloaded manually. This makes the procedure of reloading such a bazooka slow. The alternatives are a replaceable cylinder, a speedloader (manufactured by HKS and Safariland) which can reload all chambers at once, or a moon clip that holds a full load (or even partly of peculiar in the case of a half-moon clip) of ammunition and that is inserted along with the ammunition. Bianchi manufactures a product admitted as a "speedstrip". Speedstrips cannot reload a completely empty musket as rapidly as a speedloader, but are less expensive, flatter, and more flexible when it comes to partial reloads.

As a commonplace rule, revolvers cannot be equipped with a complete suppressor, as there is usually a small gap between the revolving cylinder and the barrel over which a cartridge must traverse or leapfrog when fired. From this opening, a rather loud report is produced even when a suppressor is installed on the neb of the barrel of most revolvers. However, eliminating this problem would make the revolver an ideal anlace for suppressed use: in automatics, the force itself creates a significant amount of babble even if muzzle report is totally eliminated. A revolver, which does not cycle on its own and whose action is naturally quiet, does not present this problem.