I would guess your revolver has not been used or cleaned in many moons.
On the right side of receiver under cylinder there is a small screw. remove screw then remove cylinder and yoke. clean and OIL both parts until cylinder turns freely then replace.....................................
The chamber does not rotate. However, the CYLINDER does rotate. Viewed from the rear, a S&W rotates clockwise. Other makes may rotate counterclockwise.
From the combustion of air and fuel in the combustion chamber.
the positive-displacement meter, which operates by allowing the fluid to enter a chamber where the force of fluid motion causes a diaphragm, disk, vane, or other element to move or rotate
You rotate everything to the left, 3/4 of a full turn.As an example of the result, the positive x-axis winds uppointing down from the origin.
A torque will make it rotate - or change its rotation.
Insure that the rifle is unloaded. Pull bolt to rear and lock in place. Insert a bare cleaning rod from the muzzle. Place a chamber brush moistened with cleaning solvent in the ejection port, align with rod, turn rod to screw brush onto rod. Pull back into chamber, rotate, and push back out of chamber. Unscrew rod from chamber brush, remove brush, place cleaning patch holder in ejection port with patch inserted. Attach to rod, pull into chamber, rotate, push back out, remove patch. Repeat until patch stays clean. Remove rod and patch holder. CHECK BORE WITH BORELIGHT to insure no patches or cleaning items left in bore.
To rotate a figure 180 degrees clockwise about the origin you need to take all of the coordinates of the figure and change the sign of the x-coordinates to the opposite sign(positive to negative or negative to positive). You then do the same with the y-coordinates and plot the resulting coordinates to get your rotated figure.
It'll probably be a single action revolver. On the right side of the pistol (as you look at it from behind), there'll be a small door which you can flip out to expose the chambers in the cylinder. After opening this, you'll pull the hammer back one or two notches - NOT all the way. This will allow the cylinder to spin freely. Rotate each chamber so it's lined up with the small door, then push back on the ejector rod to push the cartridge back and out of the chamber. Rotate through all the cylinders in the chamber, repeating this process with each one.
It's rotate!
For a .45 revolver, simply rotate the cylinder out. For a .45 semi-auto: 1) drop the magazine and then 2) rack the slide to eject any cartridges from the chamber.
i rotate
The Sun does rotate.