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Cowboys Wanted: Budget-Friendly Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Revolver Review by Paul Peterson

I’ve always wanted a Single Action Army revolver in .45 Long Colt, but I’d lose my appetite whenever I looked at the prices of SAA clones online. Now, thanks to Taurus’ new Deputy line of very budget-friendly SAA revolvers, I might just get that itch scratched at last.

I’ve spent several months and 360 rounds of .45 LC testing an affordable Deputy sporting a 4.75-inch barrel. Here’s how it went.

Quick Summary: Taurus’ Deputy is a value win for those looking to add a Single Action Army revolver to their collection at a fraction of the cost. It’s reliable, balanced, and the transfer-bar safety even makes it carriable.

Table of Contents

First Impressions
Features
Specifications
Reliability & Accuracy
Pros & Cons
Final Thoughts

First Impressions

 

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The Deputy has classic Old West vibes with some modern safety features. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

This was one of the few guns I was truly excited to grab from my local FFL when it arrived. Despite all the semi-auto pistols and tactical rifles I get to test every year, I’ve always had my eye on a classic Single Action Army. The platform is outdated, but it’s also classy and fun.

Alas, the cost for most full-power SAAs has remained well out of my budget.

I’ve had to satisfy my cravings for cowboy-style, single-action shooting with rimfire options like the extra-budget Rough Rider revolvers in .22 LR from Heritage, itself a subsidiary of Taurus. Yet, plinking calibers don’t quite capture the cool factor and fun that come with a “big iron” Single Action Army in .45 Long Colt.

Here’s the Deputy in .45 LC next to a plinking Heritage Rough Rider in .22 LR. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The name “Deputy” and the caliber are carved right onto the barrel. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

When I took this Deputy out of the box, I was pleasantly surprised by the well-balanced weight and overall looks. The grips are checkered polymer and easy to replace, but the rest of the gun has a nice, deep satin black finish. The hammer and trigger felt crisp, and the cylinder had a rock-solid lockup.

Sure, I would prefer some of the gorgeous color-case-hardened affairs from the likes of Colt, but not at more than six times the cost. I wanted a gun I could shoot without worry and happily share with others at the range. At a glance, this seemed like it might be exactly that.

Features

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
Normally, you would only carry an SAA revolver like this with five rounds in the cylinder and the hammer down on an empty chamber, for safety. But Taurus solved that with a transfer-bar safety that lets you safely carry all six. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Taurus is one of the kings of affordable firearms, but don’t let the company’s low-cost guns fool you. We’ve toured one of Taurus’ new factories in Southwest Georgia, and they have made some big moves to provide quality guns at budget-friendly prices.

The Deputy is a single-action-only clone of the classic Single Action Army with a medium-sized frame and a four-click hammer. That four-click hammer is a nice touch that mirrors the original, but Taurus didn’t make the Deputy as a pure clone. It upgraded it for modern safety considerations.

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
Pulling the trigger raises the transfer bar up so the hammer can strike the bar and firing pin. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
This is a four-click hammer, which is a nice touch. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Perhaps the most significant change from the original SAA is the addition of a transfer-bar safety, which moves a metal arm up when the trigger is pulled. This places the bar in just the right spot to transfer the hammer’s energy to the firing pin. The hammer simply can’t reach the firing pin without it.

Normally, Single Action Army revolvers have no such safety, and the hammer can strike the firing pin to discharge a round without a trigger pull. That is why it was common to carry these six-shot revolvers with one empty chamber under the hammer.

Taurus solved this issue with the transfer bar, making it safe to carry the Deputy with all six chambers loaded.

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
Here’s a clear look at the right side… (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
…and the left. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
Here are the very basic, fixed iron sights. They work best, in my experience, if you shoot with a bit more feeling instead of chasing a pure sight picture. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

I opted for a model sporting a 4.75-inch barrel, though we’ve recently had the 5.5-inch version out on the range for testing, too. I’m partial to the shorty. I also picked a model chambered for .45 Long Colt (or just .45 Colt), since it’s a classic caliber that matches the gun’s history.

Those looking to pair the Deputy with a preferred .357 Mag hunting rifle will be happy to know Taurus makes a version for that chambering as well.

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The loading gate is easy to use, and the plunger on the top right spits out used shells well. The cylinder can be removed by pulling the cylinder pin on the bottom right forward. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The trigger is short and crisp, essentially starting at the wall just before the break. The plunger handle is also metal, which is a step up over some other budget options out there. The checkered polymer grip panel works well, but it isn’t terribly sexy. You can pick up aftermarket replacements easily enough. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Loading is done through the loading gate on the right side. There’s a spring-loaded plunger under the barrel for manually ejecting spent shells. The process is slick and enjoyable, but it is not fast.

The plowshare grips are polymer. The checking is nice and positive in my hand, but the polymer grips are my biggest complaint overall. They just lack that… class. You can replace these with Cocobolo wood or any number of options as desired. Several grip makers offer aftermarket options for the Deputy.

The finish is deep satin black, and it is shiny enough to check your teeth. It survived my testing without any notable wear.

Specifications

 

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The cylinder pops out for cleaning. The small piece on top of the cylinder is the cylinder spacer. This is all you really need to remove for cleaning and general maintenance. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Here’s a quick breakdown of the basic specs for the Taurus Deputy with a 4.75-inch barrel.

Weight: 2.27 pounds
Frame Size: Medium
Length: 10.25 inches
Barrel Length: 4.75 inches
Sight Radius: 5.62 inches
Height: 5.11 inches
Width (Cylinder): 1.65 inches
Caliber: .45 Long Colt/.45 Colt (also available in .357 Mag)
Capacity: 6 rounds
Safety: Transfer bar
Grooves: 6
Twist Rate: 1:16.5 RH
Finish: Polished, satin black
Frame Material: Steel
Cylinder Material: Alloy steel
Barrel Material: Alloy steel
Trigger Pull: 5.29 pounds

Reliability & Accuracy

 Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
Loading and unloading are done via the loading gate. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

I can’t say that I shot this gun remarkably well right out of the gate. Single-action-only revolvers take some practice. There’s almost more of a feeling to shooting it well than a sense of aiming.

The plowshare grip shape locks the gun into your hand while still allowing it to rock back with the recoil. It’s also well designed for quickly shifting the gun in your hand when cocking the hammer for your next shot.

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
The plowshare grip shape locks the gun into your hand while still allowing it to rock with recoil and tilt back for cocking. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Even in .45 Long Colt, the recoil on this Deputy is quite controllable. In fact, I’d call it enjoyable. There is something about ripping off shots of .45 Long Colt with an Old West shooter like this. The recoil is part of the joy.

As for accuracy, the sights are basic, but the gun can handle itself at moderate ranges even in my relatively inexperienced hands.

Here’s what I got at 7 yards with my first shots after picking up the gun.

Taurus Deputy Targets
Here are my first three targets, all shot at 7 yards. I don’t have a lot of trigger time on SAA revolvers, and it shows a bit here. Still, the groups are more than adequate for self-defense needs. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

After some practice, here’s what I got for my slow and rapid-fire shooting at the same distance.

Taurus Deputy Targets
The target on the left was my slow-fire shooting at 7 yards on my second range trip. The target on the right shows what I was able to do when shooting as fast as I could cock, point, aim, and pull the trigger. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)
.45 Long Colt Ammo
My test ammo all proved to be reliable in this gun, with no hang-ups on the range. That included 150 rounds of round-nose 250-grain Remington Express, 150 rounds of 250-grain flat-nosed HSM Cowboy Action, and 60 rounds of round-nosed 255-grain Winchester Super X. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

Reliability proved to be 100 percent solid for my 360 rounds of various types of ammo. The gun remains nice and tight.

There is something very relaxing about loading and unloading an SAA revolver on the range. Most of my range trips feel pressed for time, and I tend to plow through several semi-auto guns with preloaded magazines just to get my work done.

The single-action Deputy really slowed me down, and it made my range trips all the more enjoyable for it.

Pros & Cons

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt

TAURUS DEPUTY

Here’s my short list of the pros and cons for the 4.75-inch Taurus Deputy:

Pros:

  • Very reliable
  • Great looks and feel for the money
  • Well-made
  • Accurate, if you do your part
  • Four-click hammer
  • Transfer-bar safety makes it safe to carry
  • Can safely carry six (instead of five) rounds
  • Classic, historic design
  • Loads of fun on the range
  • Affordably priced

Cons:

  • SAA revolvers take practice
  • Very simple iron sights
  • Polymer grips, which are replaceable

Final Thoughts

Taurus Deputy 4.75-Inch Barrel .45 Long Colt
I have always wanted one of these Single Action Army revolvers for my collection. Mostly, I wanted a shooter that was also affordable and rugged, and the Deputy checks those boxes. (Photo: Paul Peterson/Guns.com)

It’s hard to grow up in America without letting the lore of the Old West and cowboys color your childhood on some level. This Deputy has me feeling a bit nostalgic. If only the younger version of me could have had some time with this revolver.

At a price that is below even other budget makers of Single Action Army revolvers, the Taurus Deputy offers quality, reliability, accuracy, and good looks. The addition of a transfer-bar safety makes this a tool you could carry into the hunting fields for self-defense as well.

All in all, the Deputy is a value win that will scratch the cowboy itch for budget-minded buyers.

Taurus Deputy Revolver
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Marine Companion: Remington-Rand M1911A1 by Wiley Clapp

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A Remington-Rand M1911A1 was on the author’s hip when this photo was taken on the North bank of the TraBong River during the summer of 1966. The gun started out as a standard M1911A1 (top), but he swapped out the plastic stocks with double-diamond wood. He also replaced the 1911A1’s short trigger with the longer one of the M1911 and switched the arched mainspring housing with the earlier, flat M1911 component.


I really hope that something good happened to that particular piece of equipment, because it was a constant and treasured companion during a rough period of time. That time began in the spring of 1965 at Camp Pendleton, Calif. I first saw it when Cpl. Anthony Catarella knocked on my office door and asked for a brief moment of my time. “Cat” was the company supply NCO, and had come to tell me that our outfit had been issued a number of new replacement M1911 .45s.

One of them was the pistol he held—my new gun. The company was Company K, 3rd Batallion, 7th Marine Regiment, and we were poised to ship out for Vietnam. As we were doing so, the supply system began to cough up all kinds of new equipment and a few .45s were part of it.

The .45s were not new, but rather freshly rebuilt and refinished from the arsenal. Made sometime during World War II, my new gun was a Remington-Rand M1911A1 that had been through the refurbishing process at least a couple of times.

It had a brand-new coat of Parkerizing and was completely up to G.I. specs. Knowing my personal preference for a long trigger and flat mainspring housing, Catarella had moved them from my original pistol and installed them on the new one.

Before we left the country, I installed an old set of walnut stocks with the original double diamond checkering pattern. My modifications to the pistol did not detract from its utility, but rather enhanced its performance in my hands.

I was aware that things would have to be really bad before I would be doing much shooting with a pistol, but I was happy with my new gun. For all practical purposes, my issued M1911A1 pistol was pretty much the standard gun as used for decades by all American servicemen.

My unit sailed to Okinawa on the U.S.S. Valley Forge, went ashore there for brief training and moved to the U.S.S. Iwo Jima. This latter vessel was one of the new helicopter carriers, capable of carrying a battalion landing team and a full squadron of H-34 helicopters.

Our assignment was to go on station off the coast of Vietnam, landing whenever and wherever needed. After a couple of false starts, we finally went for real—at Qui Nonh on July 1, 1965. 

Since available records told me nothing about my pistol’s war record, I never knew where it had been. It’s entirely possible the old .45 rode ashore in one or more of the Pacific Island campaigns of World War II. It might even have been a veteran of Korea as well as World War II. I was not.

It may have been a veteran gun, but it was an inexperienced Marine that carried it aboard the helicopter and ashore. The first step out the door brought us hard up against the reality of life in Vietnam. We (man and gun) stepped into a rice paddy.

Actually, this turned out to be a recurring experience for the time I spent in Vietnam. Sometimes I flew into rice paddies, sometimes I walked into them and sometimes, I must confess, I made a frantic headfirst dive. It gave you an appreciation of Southeast Asian horticultural practices, particularly as it applies to fertilization. But every time I went into a paddy, the .45 also went—it was attached to my person by means of that old familiar flapped G.I. holster. And every time we went into a paddy, the gun went into the contents of that paddy.

Now, I was familiar with the procedures for fieldstripping the M1911A1 pistol for cleaning. But when a firearm is immersed in rice paddy mud, it has to be disassembled down to every last part—you simply can’t properly clean it without doing so. I knew how to do it, but preferred not to do it so often.

And I discovered another thing about the grand old gun and its less-than-grand old holster. As much as you grew accustomed to the comforting weight of the pistol, you became aware that an inch or more of butt is sticking out of the holster. And as time went by, we all started standing with the right hand on the top of the holster. This brings the hand into contact with the pistol, where the always-present perspiration rusted the daylights out of the steel.

Just as I came to treasure the gun as a companion, I dreaded the amount of maintenance required to keep it going. Most of the time, my practice was to tend to the pistol before I ate my evening C-ration. Usually, that was ham and lima beans. I still wonder why I got so many cans of this meal.

M1911A1 pistols—the last of which were made in 1945—were issued to officers, machine gunners and others during the Vietnam War, but they were also used by “tunnel rats” such as Sgt. Robert A. Payne.

The point was simply that you paid for the comfort of having on your hip a specimen of the best battle pistol ever devised by man. The troops had it a whole lot worse—they had an M14 rifle to worry about.

In the fall of that first year in country, I was transferred over to H&S Company when I became a member of the battalion staff.

I had my pistol properly transferred to that unit’s property logs, since I had grown downright fond of that particular gun. In this new role, I spent a lot of time around the battalion command post.

I even tried one of those sexy shoulder rigs to carry my old .45. Don’t try it, that strap cuts into your neck something awful. While the wear on the gun was lessened by being under cover a little more, I still checked it daily.

Then in mid-’66, I caught a break and went back to another rifle company. I had to go rather suddenly, but took the gun and transferred the title to Company I.

Out in the field again (more rice paddies) the aging .45 continued the cycle of immersion in questionable liquids (even salt water several times), cleaning and more wear.

I discovered that sand and dust, propelled by sweeping helicopter blades, accelerated the wear and sometimes almost sandblasted the gun. But it continued to work just like Colt engineers, Army Ordnance officers and old John Browning designed it to in 1910-1911.

By now, I am guessing you are waiting for the pithy little battle tale about the time the clean-but-worn M1911A1 .45 saved my ass. It never happened. But it came along on many patrols, sweeps, skirmishes and even a few genuine battles.

In that time, the gun was so worn that it no longer had that green Parkerizing color, but was a dull silver/gray. Campaigning in the winter in the DMZ was hard on the gun, and, some mornings, I’d wake up to find the .45 had grown a coat of red hair.

It could only be removed with steel wool, and I didn’t have any of the fine stuff. But the gun soldiered on—it always worked. I could only hope that I was up to the task. I knew the gun was.

At the end of my tour, I was pleased to be going home and leaving the company in the capable hands of Reed Clark. He got the gun, too. Several days later, I was home at my parents’ place in California. As we got ready to go out for a big welcome home dinner at a favorite restaurant, I found myself missing the familiar weight of my constant companion.