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A ‘Prestigious Man Stopper’ The Mark VI Webley .455

Talyn

Emissary
Founding Member
With a story that runs nearly the entire length of the 20th Century, the iconic top-break British Webley in .455 Caliber Eley is a beast.

The Webley top-break revolver itself dates to the company’s original Mark I service revolver, which was adopted by the British military in 1887, starting around £3 each, and a host of generational changes until the wheel gun seen in this piece, the Mark VI, arrived on the scene in May 1915.

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The Mark VI Webley .455 runs almost a foot long, taping out at 11.25 inches. It weighs 2.5 pounds, unloaded.

A top-break six-shooter, it replaced the shorter Mark V, which had a rounded bird’s head style grip, with a much larger gun using a squared butt, 6-inch barrel, and a somewhat adjustable front sight. Best yet for His Majesty’s bean counters, the wartime finish Mark VI only cost some 51 shillings per gun, or about £2.5.

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The .455 Webley (right), in this case a 262-grain lead round-nosed Mk.II bullet, compared to a 230-grain .45 ACP FMJ, a bullet familiar to
readers this side of the pond. The .455 was introduced in 1891, whereas Browning’s .45 ACP dated to about two decades later.
It remains a “Cool Revolver.”

Just ask John Wick.

A Webley .455 Mk VI revolver is one of the old-fashioned handguns that John Wick (Keanu Reeves) surrenders at the entrance to the Ruska Roma's church in Berlin.

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The Webley Mark VI made cameos in both “John Wick 3” and 4, continuing a nearly 100-year cinematic run. (Photo: IMFDB)

 
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Always wanted one.
Semi fugly in a good way. Unique.
Ammo runs about $1.00 a round avg.
Prices are along the lines of a nice modern pistol
 
Here is a pic of my Webley Mk VI 455. 2.75" barrel. Cylinder cut for 45acp in full moon clips or 45 autorim. It has standard military replaceable front sight milled into the one piece barrel/frame. (not a barrel chop with aftermarket front sight) Rounded Mk VI grip frame with armorers broad arrow stamp on backstrap, so it is not an aftermarket chopshop job either. It has hand made, hand checkered English walnut grip panels with brass bolsters. I have never seen another like it, or even heard of another like it, and I have seen a LOT of Webley Mk VI's over the last 45 years. This one is DEFINITELY John Wick worthy. I am just glad I found it before a movie company prop shop did. Even with a short barrel it is definitely still a "manstopper" and a single-shot 410 shotshell snake charmer (I would NEVER carry it that way off course).

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Here is a pic of my Webley Mk VI 455. 2.75" barrel. Cylinder cut for 45acp in full moon clips or 45 autorim. It has standard military replaceable front sight milled into the one piece barrel/frame. (not a barrel chop with aftermarket front site) Rounded Mk VI grip frame with armorers broad arrow stamp on backstrap, so it is not an aftermarket chopshop job either. It has hand made, hand checkered English walnut grip panels with brass bolsters. I have never seen another like it, or even heard of another like it, and I have seen a LOT of Webley Mk VI's over the last 45 years. This one is DEFINITELY John Wick worthy. I am just glad I found it before a movie company prop shop did. Even with a short barrel it is definitely still a "manstopper" and a single-shot 410 shotshell snake charmer.

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Im jealous! I love nicely chopped Webleys
 
Here is a pic of my Webley Mk VI 455. 2.75" barrel. Cylinder cut for 45acp in full moon clips or 45 autorim. It has standard military replaceable front sight milled into the one piece barrel/frame. (not a barrel chop with aftermarket front sight) Rounded Mk VI grip frame with armorers broad arrow stamp on backstrap, so it is not an aftermarket chopshop job either. It has hand made, hand checkered English walnut grip panels with brass bolsters. I have never seen another like it, or even heard of another like it, and I have seen a LOT of Webley Mk VI's over the last 45 years. This one is DEFINITELY John Wick worthy. I am just glad I found it before a movie company prop shop did. Even with a short barrel it is definitely still a "manstopper" and a single-shot 410 shotshell snake charmer (I would NEVER carry it that way off course).

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That has a "I mean business" look about it! Great find
 
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