OK, .22 revolver gurus, any advice would be appreciated. In all my years I've had numerous .22 semi-autos, but never a revolver, so I bought what sounded like one of the best. Took it to the range today, shot about 50 rounds through it, and got splattered a few times on the left side of my face. I've attached two pics of what it looks like around the forcing cone, which looks to me like there's way too much crud and even lead. I understand that because of the necessary cylinder gap some gas/junk will escape, but this seems excessive. My Redhawk .357 and Super Redhawk .44 never spit or looked like this, though I shot either hard cast or jacketed bullets.
My searches indicated everything from it's normal, to that should never happen, to the forcing cone may not be cut correctly, to cylinder misalignment, to inconsistent cylinder gap spacing, to cheap ammo, etc.
Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thx.