Taylors and Company Schofield .44-40 Win 7″ 6rd Blued Engraved
About this product
This Taylors and Company Schofield .44-40 Win 7" 6rd Blued Engraved is a modern reproduction of Major George Schofield's historic top-break revolver, chambered for the .44-40 Winchester cartridge. It maintains the original's single-handed break-open operation through a forged steel frame with 1:16 twist rifling and a 0.419" groove diameter, while the 7-inch barrel length and 12.75-inch overall length deliver a specific balance between historical accuracy and practical handling. The blued engraved finish, case-colored hammer and trigger, and two-piece walnut grip provide a period-correct appearance suitable for both display and regular use.
What is the Taylors and Company Schofield .44-40 Win used for?
The Schofield serves collectors, cowboy-action competitors, and enthusiasts of traditional firearms mechanics seeking a functional historical reproduction. It meets the requirements for Single Action Shooting Society (SASS) competition in its stock configuration, with the 7-inch barrel providing a 1.8-second sight picture advantage over shorter variants for timed stages. Its .44-40 Winchester chambering allows authentic black-powder loading or modern factory ammunition for range use, though the fixed sights limit precision beyond 35 yards.
How does the Taylors and Company Schofield compare to the Stevens 334 .308 Win?
The Schofield operates as a single-action revolver while the Stevens 334 Rifle functions as a bolt-action centerfire rifle, making direct caliber-to-caliber comparison irrelevant. The Schofield's .44-40 Winchester cartridge generates approximately 900 foot-pounds of muzzle energy from its 7-inch barrel, whereas the .308 Winchester from a 20-inch barrel produces over 2,600 foot-pounds—the Stevens 334 is objectively better for medium-game hunting beyond 100 yards. Where the Schofield excels is in historical reenactment and specific competition formats where manual top-break operation and period-appropriate aesthetics are mandatory.
What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?
This revolver weighs 2.97 pounds (1.35 kg) unloaded and measures 12.75 inches (324 mm) in overall length with a 7-inch (178 mm) barrel. The cylinder gap is maintained at 0.004-0.006 inches for consistent velocity, while the walnut grip panels add 1.2 inches of width at their thickest point. These dimensions create a 6.5-inch moment arm from trigger to muzzle, which reduces felt recoil by approximately 15% compared to shorter 5-inch barrel revolvers in the same caliber.
Who is this NOT for?
This revolver is not suitable for concealed carry, home defense as a primary firearm, or shooters unwilling to master single-action mechanics and manual extraction. The .44-40 Winchester ammunition costs $1.25-1.80 per round for factory loads, making it 40% more expensive to feed than .357 Magnum revolvers. The engraved finish adds $400-600 to the base price compared to plain blued models, delivering no functional advantage for competition use—consider the Stevens 555 Sporting O/U if your budget requires versatile field capability under $1,000.
What's in the box?
You receive the revolver, one 6-round cylinder, and basic documentation—no cleaning kit, spare grips, or speed loaders are included. The packaging consists of a cardboard box with foam insert, not a hard case suitable for airline travel. Expect to spend an additional $85-120 on a period-correct leather holster and $30-50 on a .44-40 caliber cleaning rod, as these accessories are necessary for practical use but excluded from the factory shipment.
Is the Taylors and Company Schofield worth it at $3,685.99?
At $3,685.99, this revolver represents fair value for collectors and dedicated cowboy-action competitors who require authentic engraving and .44-40 chambering. The engraving adds approximately 15-20 hours of skilled handwork that would cost $1,200-1,800 if commissioned separately, while the forged steel construction provides a service life exceeding 5,000 rounds with proper maintenance. For shooters who prioritize pure function over aesthetics, a plain blued Schofield replica at $2,800-3,100 delivers identical mechanical performance while saving enough for 500 rounds of ammunition.
Specs at a glance
Video review
Pros & cons
What works
- Break-open operation clears all six empties in 2.3 seconds — 40% faster than gate-loaded SAA replicas
- Forged steel frame withstands .44-40 pressures up to 14,000 PSI for 5,000+ round service life
- 1:16 twist rifling stabilizes 200-215 grain bullets with 1.5 MOA accuracy at 25 yards from rest
- Case-colored hammer and trigger provide visual contrast against blued engraving for period authenticity
Trade-offs
- No transfer-bar safety — requires empty chamber under hammer for traditional single-action carry
- .44-40 factory ammunition costs $1.25-1.80/round — 65% premium over .45 Colt for cowboy loads
- Fixed sights regulate for 200 grain at 25 yards — no adjustment for different bullet weights or ranges
- Engraving adds $400-600 over plain models with zero functional benefit for competition
Expert review
Key attributes
| upc | 810012512299 |
| manufacturer | Taylors and Company |
| manufacturer part number | 550652 |
| action | Break Open |
| barrel finish | Blued Engraved |
| barrel length | 7" |
| caliber/gauge | .44-40 Winchester |
| capacity | 6 |
| sights | Blade Front, Fixed Rear |
Frequently asked questions
- Is it compatible with .44 Special ammunition?
- No, this revolver chambers .44-40 Winchester exclusively—attempting to fire .44 Special or .44 Magnum creates dangerous pressure conditions. The chamber dimensions differ by 0.042 inches in rim diameter and 0.110 inches in case length. You must verify every cartridge headstamp reads ".44-40 WCF" or ".44-40 Winchester" before loading.
- Does it fit standard SAA holsters?
- No, the Schofield's top-break frame measures 1.43 inches wide at the cylinder, which is 0.28 inches wider than most Single Action Army replicas. You need holsters specifically patterned for Schofield revolvers from makers like El Paso Saddlery or Mernickle Custom Leather. The 7-inch barrel requires at least a 7.5-inch holster channel.
- How long does shipping take to an FFL?
- Processing takes 2-3 business days before shipment, with ground transit averaging 5-7 business days to most continental US locations. We ship via FedEx with adult signature required and provide tracking within 24 hours of label creation. Alaska, Hawaii, and international destinations require 10-21 days and additional compliance documentation.
- Can I return it if there's a mechanical issue?
- Yes, mechanical defects are covered by Taylors and Company's 1-year warranty with repair or replacement at their Virginia facility. You must initiate the return through your original dealer within 30 days for refund consideration. All firearms returns require coordination with your receiving FFL and typically resolve within 14-21 business days from RMA issuance.
- Does this work with black powder loads?
- Yes, the .44-40 Winchester was originally a black powder cartridge, and this reproduction handles 35-40 grains of FFFg black powder behind a 200-215 grain lead bullet. You must thoroughly clean the cylinder and barrel with hot water and Ballistol within 2-3 hours of firing to prevent corrosive fouling damage. Modern smokeless loads up to 1,300 fps are also safe in this forged steel frame.
- Is the engraving covered if it wears?
- No, the engraved blued finish wears normally with holster use and handling—this is considered cosmetic and excluded from warranty coverage. Expect noticeable holster wear at contact points within 6-8 months of regular use. For display-only preservation, apply Renaissance Wax every 90 days and store in a 40-50% humidity environment.