Demo

A well-made wheelgun is a palate cleanser in a world of polymer-frame, striker-fired semi-auto, Glock wannabes. At range day, the first gun I shot was the Diamondback SDR-A, and it helped set the mood for the rest of my day, which I assure you only ended in sore feet and not libations, or too many libations anyway.

Small size, light weight, 6 round capacity

Diamondback makes a lot of different things, from ultra-micro 9mms to PDW-like guns with the DBX. They entered the world of revolvers a few SHOT Shows back and expanded into a couple of different sizes, and even made a 9mm version. The guns are traditionally stainless steel, hefty, but shootable.

The Self Defensive Revolver line has been hitting the mark for a couple of years, but for 2026, they’ve addressed the one thing that keeps their all-steel snub-nose out of my pocket: weight.

The “A” Factor

The A in SDR-A stands for aluminum. It is Diamondback’s answer to the super-light, pocket revolver category. By moving to a forged 7075-T6 aluminum frame, they’ve cut the weight to 15.6 ounces. For comparison, the original all-steel SDR sits at over 21 ounces. That doesn’t make it the lightest revolver by any means, but it’s light and affordable, with an MSRP of $614.

Big fan of the sights on these guns

We’ve seen what happens when you use too much aluminum. Does the Colt M13 ring any bells? The 2-inch barrel and the fluted six-shot cylinder are still made from stainless steel. This makes sure the gun only goes boom in one direction.

Key Specs

  • Capacity: 6 Rounds
  • Caliber: .38 Special +P.
  • Trigger: Double-Action Only (DAO) with a shrouded hammer.
  • Finish: Glass bead blast with a DBGuard coating for corrosion resistance.
  • Sights: Fixed orange fiber-optic front and a low-profile green fiber-optic rear.
  • MSRP: $614.

Range Impressions

Putting lead downrange with a 15-ounce .38 can usually be a masochistic experience, but the SDR-A is surprisingly easy on the hand. We were shooting a fairly mild 130-grain load from Federal, but it was still downright soft shooting. The rubberized grips provide enough grip to grab while remaining small enough for concealment.

The recoil was surpsingly mild

The trigger is a nice surprise. For a budget-friendly revolver, the pull is non-stacking and impressively smooth. When you combine that with the fact that Diamondback put a dovetailed rear sight on the gun, I remained on target out to 25 yards with ease. Not just slow fire, but shoot, sights align, shoot type speed.

I wanted to shoot it more, but sadly, my time was up all too soon. I’m excited to hopefully try a variant of the SDR for a longer-term test.

It’s a palate cleaner

The Verdict

We got the size and weight of a compact revolver, the capacity of a mid-size revolver, excellent sights, a decent trigger, and an MSRP of $614.

It seems like a winner for Diamondback.

Am I forgetting anything? Oh, you can use most S&W J-frame grips with it to.

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