For a few dollars more


You could take your speakers, hang em high, and feel the sudden impact. Granted you may have to turn your amp every which way but loose, but then you could play misty for me any which way you can and not feel like we had to run the gauntlet. In a perfect world the beguiled listener would be the rookie, and to spend more would be a true crime. In other words, you don't need to spend a million dollar, baby.
128x128millercarbon
@griff69-      A Smith & Wesson, Model 29, .44 Magnum, to be exact, in most of the Dirty Harry stuff.     YEP: the Automag only appeared in Sudden Impact.  
Quentin's movies are brilliant and I am a big fan except that many of his movies are ruined with usually one completely unnecessary and distasteful sequence/scene. 
@oldhvymec- " They are so loud because nothing escapes around a wheel,..."                           You’ll never see a sound suppressor on a revolver (wheel gun), unless it’s in a movie with a screenplay writer that knows nothing about weaponry (common).     There’s no way to silence the blast/noise that’s emitted from the gap, between the cylinder front and barrel’s forcing cone.     An automatic/semiauto/select fire can be suppressed, because by the time the breech is unlocked and casing has left the chamber, the pressure in the barrel has dissipated (projectile’s gone), even in full auto.     The only thing escaping from the ejection port, should be the cartridge casing.
That's nothing compared to William Holden firing the pre-WW1 Browning .30 water-cooled belt-fed mg at the Mexicans during the ending of The Wild Bunch (1969). A masterpiece of brutality by director Sam Peckinpah!