I've played with a couple of them. When shooting Hornet in a revolver you have to keep the chambers squeaky clean, no oil residue and as little powder residue as possible. It's the same problem Colt had with the .44-40 way back in the day. Because .44-40 was a black powder round, people kept the gun well oiled, including the chambers, and the lubrication in the chambers would cause the cartridge to first slip back against the recoil shield, then the cartridge would expand; and then the whole thing would lock up tight and you couldn't turn the cylinder to save your life. Same thing with the Raging Hornet, keep the chambers REALLY clean and it will work fine.

BTW, the two that I have shot were wicked accurate. I'm talking nearly MOA at 100m. Loud as all get out, but a whole lot of fun to shoot.

The Raging series revolvers have the strongest lockup of any DA revolver, and every one I've ever shot was crazy accurate. Shot a .480 that broke MOA at 100m. Would have bought it on the spot had it been anything but a .480.