Pull the trigger
It's your control of your trigger finger. There is no safety device on a Rohm revolver.
depends on the model revolver. single action just in front of trigger guard............ modern revolver bottom of butt............
My iver johnson has the serial # on the trigger guard
I believe along the top of the barrel. serial # might be in front of trigger guard, depending on type pf revolver......................
This is probably a replica revolver produced in Italy.
No serial number provided; no way to answer.
so it won't dischage if you force it into a pocket..............it's like a safety.
Impossible to tell with such limited information.
Early revolvers were single action- you had to cock the hammer manually, then pull the trigger. An example would be the Colt Peacemaker. A double action revolver (such as a S&W 357 magnum- Mdl 66) can be fired by pulling the trigger. Trigger pull, by itself, will cause the hammer to rise and fall. OR- the hammer may be cocked, and then the trigger pulled. A "DAO" or double action only, the hammer cannot be cocked, and the gun must be fired by pulling the trigger.
Do you mean the cylinder on a revolver? If the cylinder on a revolver doesn't turn when you pull the trigger, then there is something wrong with the action, probably a part broken.
Depends on the revolver. Some are double action- pulling the trigger makes the hammer rise and fall, firing the revolver- so it will fire as fast as you can pull the trigger- but usually at the cost of accuracy. Older style revolvers were usually single action- the hammer had to be manually cocked, and then the trigger pulled. One fast fire technique was known as "fanning" The trigger would he held down with fingers of one hand, and the other hand was rapidly brushed over the hammer, cocking it, and causing it to fire as soon as it was cocked. Accuracy was horrible.