
Taurus currently offers 14 different Judge models. The standard Judge is available in matte black or stainless steel with a 3- or 6½-inch barrel and capable of shooting .45 Colt or .410-bore loads. There is also a Magnum Judge that has the same exterior finish and barrel lengths, but with a slightly different rubber pistol grip than the standard variant. However, both models are capable of shooting five 3-inch .410 loads. The guns weigh between 29 and 32 ounces and can function as a double- or single-action revolver. There is also the Judge Public Defender that sports a shorter 2- or 2½-inch barrel. The Raging Judge 513 is chambered in .45 Colt and .410 but is also capable of firing .454 Casull. Interestingly, Taurus debuted a 28-gauge prototype of the Judge in 2011, but the revolver never went into production because it could not meet the legal 18-inch barrel requirement for a shotgun and the bore diameter was greater than .50 inches, too large for a handgun in the U.S. The Judge co*es with a bonus safety feature: A security key that allows you to disable the pistol so that it cannot fire.
A few years after Taurus launched the Judge, Smith & Wesson debuted the Governor, which is a more co*pact revolver (8½ inches with a 2¾-inch barrel) that can shoot .410, .45 ACP, or .45 Colt. The biggest difference is the Governor can only shoot 2½-inch .410 loads as opposed to the 3-inch capability of the Judge. But the Governor has a six-round magazine, so you get one more .410 shell than with the Taurus. There are two Governor models distinguished by their exterior finish. One is an all-stainless-steel variant, and the second has a stainless PVD application to the cylinder and the frame is made of scandium alloy, which includes a mixture of aluminum in the metal. Both guns weigh just under 30 ounces, have fixed rear sights, and a dove-tailed front sight.
The G2 Contender platform is extremely versatile because it allows you to shoot multiple calibers—one of those being a .410—from the same gun simply by swapping barrels. You can shoot a total of 11 different rimfire and centerfire loads with the G2 Contender pistol (there is a rifle as well), from .17 HMR up to .45/70. The barrels are fairly simple to interchange as well, just remove the fore-end and tap out the hinge pin. To operate the G2, you simply break it open like an over/under or side-by-side by pulling on the trigger guard spur (located at the bottom of the trigger guard), insert the load, close the action, cock the hammer, and pull the trigger. The barrels are drilled and tapped for an optic, and you can also affix a bipod to the fore-end for more stability and better accuracy.
The Magnum Research BFR sports a rare steel bead at the end of your choice of 7½- or 10-inch barrel options. The bead is unobtrusive for any shooter so that you shoot the BFR more like a shotgun than a pistol as most smoothbore enthusiasts don’t aim at a moving target with the front sight, but rather find the leading edge and pull the trigger. A single-action five-shot wheelgun, the BFR is chambered for .410/.45 Colt and is also available in 13 centerfire options. It’s a long, heavy revolver that measures 17½ inches and weighs over 5 pounds, which will help soak up recoil. The BFR shoots 3-inch .410 shotshells and is the only pistol of the bunch that has a screw-in choke system (a modified choke and wrench ships with the gun). All the centerfire BFRs are drilled and tapped for an optic, but the .410/.45 Colt is not.
The Snake Slayer is the only gun on this list small enough to conceal-carry, and with offerings in .357 Magnum/.38 Special, and .45 ACP, that makes it a real possibility. Of course, the double-barrel pistol is available in .410/.45 Colt, and like the G2 Contender, quick barrel swaps will allow you to shoot a variety of calibers (.22 LR and .22 WMR included) from it. The barrels, which are just 3½ inches long, are held in place by a screw, and all you need is an Allen wrench to remove it and make the switch. A fixed blade front and rear sight will help with quick target acquisition, plus this gun only weighs 1 pound, 6 ounces, so it will easily fit in a pant pocket.
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