

🔫 Own the range with power, precision, and style!
The Crosman SNR357 is a sleek, full-metal, CO2-powered snub nose revolver firing .177 caliber pellets up to 500 fps and BBs up to 400 fps. Featuring a 6-shot swing-out cylinder, dual ammo compatibility, adjustable sights, and a slide safety, it offers realistic weight and handling ideal for skill development and backyard target practice.





| ASIN | B01GVS1O7M |
| Air Gun Power Type | CO2 |
| Barrel Material Type | Alloy Steel |
| Best Sellers Rank | #10,823 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #9 in Air Pistols |
| Brand | Crosman |
| Brand Name | Crosman |
| Caliber | 0.177 |
| Color | Black/Grey |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 8,332 Reviews |
| Frame Material Type | Plastic |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00028478148666 |
| Included Components | hunting-air-guns |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 9.5"L x 7.5"W x 1.5"H |
| Item Type Name | Crosman SNR357 .177-Caliber Pellet/4.5 MM BB CO2-Powered Snub Nose Revolver, Black/Grey |
| Item Weight | 2 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Crosman Corporation |
| Product Dimensions | 9.5"L x 7.5"W x 1.5"H |
| Rounds | 6 |
| UPC | 028478148666 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | LIMITED 1 YEAR WARRANTY |
A**R
Love the BB gun
Can't believe the feel and the weight of the BB gun . Looks so real and feels so realistic. Good value for the money functional is good for a BB gun
M**K
Good buy
Great pistol would buy again
J**O
Nice for the price!
I was looking for an at-home trainer for my 4” Ruger Security Six. This is a bit shorter in the barrel, but fits the holster. Works well for working out how to get it clear and on point. If you screw up and shoot yourself, it will be a lesson but not a life lesson. The SNR357 has very similar dimensions and grip size to several real steel magnum pistols. It is about half a pound lighter than the real steel magnum, but then it’s not a firearm. The pellet cartridges are interchangeable with the Crosman Remington single action revolver. The BB cartridges are front loading like the Dan Wesson pistols. Again the Crosman Remington BB cartridges are compatible and rear loading. Not a big deal with the 7.5 inch barrel on the Remington, but when you have a 2.5 inch smooth bore barrel, the extra two inches in the cartridges can help just a little bit. The grips are plastic and the rear part that slides open runs in two tracks with small tabs top and bottom. I recommend taking a little extra time and feeling out how it works. If you man-handle it you will break it. It’s a little fragile and fiddly but once you get it it’s easy and they feel nice. Start by pulling back gently right behind the cylinder latch about half an inch (12.5 mm). Then gently pull the bottom out and the whole thing will slide backwards. It will then pivot upward out of the way when you insert the co2 bulb and are turning the piercing key. Note where the bottom track is and line the bottom tabs up with the track. When both top and bottom are lined up with the tracks, gently squeeze the back part of the grip forward and closed. I painted the front sight red and put white dots on either side of the rear notch. This is easy to pick up with my old eyes in lower light settings. Accuracy is about what you might expect with a 2.5” smooth bore barrel. Pellets are slightly more accurate. They fit the 4.5 mm tube closely. Steel BBs are more like 4.4 mm and rattle around a bit. All in all, I am happy with the purchase, and recommend it for point and shoot training. I find the technique takes quite a bit of practice to train your brain to judge the angle of your wrist. Your grip must be absolutely consistent. Using an airgun is about a tenth of the cost of shooting powder and BBs are about ten dollars a million. Once I got it worked out, about 10,000 rounds for good consistency and muscle control, I practiced at the range with my real steel piece to prove it to myself. I wasn’t surprised by the added recoil and noise, by the time that happens you are done shooting. You have done all the good or harm you are able to do. The air gun is, in my opinion and experience valuable trigger time whenever I get 30 minutes to go to the garage and shoot 100 rounds. Three or four times a week adds up. Just like learning a musical instrument.
D**B
Good pistol
I’m a long time Airgun shooter- equally a long time non- shooter that has come back into airgun shooting. I have always been a fan for Crosman Airguns ( and not because I live a few miles away from their E Bloomfield plant). They have had a good balance of reliability, accuracy, quality, and price for their products. This pistol is no different. Fortunately, I got this pistol before the shipping restrictions happened here. Opening the box, the pistol is well packed with a form fitting box. The pistol comes with the safety on. It is pretty tight until you move the lever a few times to loosen it. Now, I am not a fan of using pistol round looking ammunition holders. I’m used to using the small rotary holders but some research somewhere showed Crosman to go this route- but I, as a retired LEO and First Responder am not a fan. So you open the cylinder as you would a regular wheel gun. You can simply point the pistol up to eject the holders or you can push the ejection rod. Load the cylinder and push the cylinder back into the frame. As with a wheel firearm, you NEVER want to use the flick your worst method of loading the cylinder into the frame- you’ll end up damaging the timing of the cylinder and the headspace == expensive repairs. You can shoot Single Action ( SA) or Double Action ( DA). The pistol is fairly accurate in short ranges- the barrel is short so any further then 15-20 feet you’re pushing it. Obviously, if you’re shooting SA you’ll get a little bit better accuracy. DA tigger pull is pretty easy and smooth with multiple shots. I say buy this if you’re a beginner shooter, or an experienced shooter. Not only for airgun shooting, but it teaches the basics of the forgotten art of wheel gun shooting and handling.
K**Y
Kills rats.
I searched tirelessly for a maneuverable pellet handgun that is capable of fast follow up shots in tight spaces to be able to hunt rats that turn up around our chicken coops every winter. This revolver is exactly what I was looking for. I received it today, and this evening went out and took my first rat without waking the neighbors or worrying about the path of the projectile causing collateral damage. Just enough power to take small game between 5 and 20 feet and I would never need it for a distance greater than that anyway. The gun itself is well thought out and made of sensible materials. I hate to see that others recieved broken or malfunctioning units, mine has been excellent. The ability to switch between pellet and bb is a huge added bonus. It is well worth the money as long as you make sure you get a good unit. Especially if, like me, you are waging war on rodent-kind. Take care of yourselves out there.
C**N
Only one bb at a time?
Love the look and feel. Easy to load but kinda disappointed u can only load 1 in each cartridge and only shoot one lil ole bb at a time. I had hoped u could like fill up those cartridges full of bbs and not just one at a time. Dang.
J**D
It’s heavy and looks real
Nice size heavy gun , definitely will purchase more products for this company 5star
L**A
Defective batch
Defective cut in the frame. Causes cylinder to not spin. Please expand the image to see the red, green, and blue lines. The green circle is where a circular hole should be cut, allowing the pin to slide into the green circle from the right to the left. You can see where the pin from the cylinder is scraping off the paint as it is spring loaded to put out pressure. The cylinder engages the pin, but can slide out of alignment along the red arrow. This makes it so that the cylinder cannot be engaged by the hook left of the yellow lines. It can only function if the cylinder pin stays in the green circle. The yellow box is where the metal is cut where it should not be cut at all. There should have been a drill to punch in a hole. Instead a router cut out the area leaving a significant gap allowing the cylinder pin to slide out of alignment causing the cylinder to not be able to spin when the trigger is pulled. It worked for about a week with light use. It ceased to work after enough metal was scraped away on the pins. The defect became gradually worse until it ceased completely. Bonus: The safety defect was also an issue. It took a lot of force to get it to unstick from the defective bur. Crosman reps if you're reading this it's a damn shame. The thing was pretty cool and fun to work with. Longer barrel versions would be nice to consider too. The handle also needs a magnet or some kind of latching mechanism. It slides off with barely any force and can start sliding off the moment you grab the handle.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago