At that price point I am sure there will be some interest.
You would be catering to the ROA & Remmie shooters though... Fear not, theirs a mess of them goobers out there
For me & mine what shoot Colts there is little need.
Rusty,
Actually I load all of my Colts on a bench loader. I break mine down between every stage, clean the tubes, check for debris especially around the hammer slot and wipe them down. Before I got my first bench loader I used to charge powder, add a lubed wad and then reassemble the pistol to seat balls then I'd pull the barrel again to clean the lead rings and had to reassemble it a second time. Too much work! I can load my revolvers as fast as someone loading them using the barrel mounted rammer, check them, clean them and keep my pistols running trouble free an entire match. Almost every other stage I find cap fragments somewhere when I pull the barrel and cylinder.
If you look at any pair of my revolvers they almost look new (but the newest pair is three years old) because I don't put a lot of wear and tear on them using the barrel mounted system. If you pay attention you will notice the stress you actually put on the pistol while ramming a ball home. I shoot trouble free matches gunfighter style, I can't afford to have a sticky action or dirty pistol with both hands full.
I do all of this while manning the safety officer position at the unloading table. No one has or ever will ever accuse me of not pulling my weight on a posse. I start out as a spotter, take my turn shooting about half of the way through then finish out the stage as a safety officer at the unloading table. The loader helps me be able to do this because you can see exactly what you are doing and stop at any point to do your duty as the unloading table officer. I notice a lot of Cap-N-Ball shooters go off on their own to recharge because they don't want to be distracted, this isn't a problem with the cylinder off, you can stop, re-inspect and start back up at any point. I have it all kitted up and stick to a a choreographed routine.
I like the looks of this loader, he is using the linkage concept commonly seen in toggle clamps. It's compact, has compund leverage and controls the motion of the rammer keeping it very linear and better than most other designs.
Kudos,
Mako