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Gil Martin
02-24-2008, 05:07 AM
Years ago, I had a Colt Official Police revolver and liked it. For some reason, I traded it off for something else. Yesterday, I came across a Colt Officers Model in mint condition cheap. It looks like an Official Police, but has adjustable sights. An old gunsmith swore that the Colt Official Police action locks up tightly and he was right. For some reason, the new revolvers and semi-auto handguns do not appeal to me. I much prefer the older classic handguns. All the best...
Gil

Catfish
02-24-2008, 07:52 AM
Well Gil I like revolvers and prefer single actions for hunting. In fact I`ve only owned 1 semi-auto center fire handgun in my life, and the only reason I bought it was because it was to cheap to let go. I gave it to my oldest daughter for a ccw gun. I`ve killed a pile of deer with my old 3 screw Super Black Hawk. I do like BIG BORE handguns. I have 3- .44 mags, a .45 Colt, 2 - .454`s and a .500 S&W. My favorite vidio clip is of a young lady, maybe 110 lbs. soaking wet, shooting a 500 S&W with 440 gn. bullets loaded to the max. I love to show it to those big guy that won`t shoot ti. ;)

Nulle
02-24-2008, 08:24 AM
I started off shooting the S&W 38 Chief and it was great. We loaded our own shells and managed to get pretty darn good with it shooting cans ect.

Adam Helmer
02-24-2008, 12:57 PM
Gil,

Excellent post. I prefer OLD Colt autos and OLD S&W revolvers. Occasionally, I come across an old handgun and it usually comes home with me.

Adam

Rapier
02-27-2008, 12:44 PM
I have a "thing" for OM Ruger single actions, course I have been an RCA member since 75.:D We will not talk anout how many... let's just say, a few.

But, over the years I have become quite fond of the Freedom Arms 353 and 252 guns. I carry a 66 Smith 4 inch gun and also at times a 1911 long slide single stack in 45 ACP. Course at near its 100th year, the 1911 is pretty classy for an auto.
Ed

Joe Boleo
02-27-2008, 07:02 PM
Have not bought a new handgun in a long, long time. I prefer the older ones. Take care...
Joe

Dan Morris
02-27-2008, 07:39 PM
I'm not a fan of the new stuff either. Still have my old Smith 19 and 27...both in 4"...not to forget the 1911. Been a lot of miles with all of them.
Dan
:cool:

Joe Boleo
03-01-2008, 06:51 AM
My favorites are the older Colts and Smiths. They do not have all the locks and such that we got along very well without for half a century. Take care...
Joe

Rev
03-10-2008, 02:45 PM
Originally posted by Joe Boleo
My favorites are the older Colts and Smiths. They do not have all the locks and such that we got along very well without for half a century. Take care...
Joe

I love the older Colts and S&W's too. But for full tilt .44 mag. loads, I use only my Ruger Super Blackhawk (250 LSWC/24.5 grs. H110@1400 f/s). I shoot medium loads in my S&W 29 (250 gr. LSWC/8 grs. Unique@850 f/s).

I've always heard that full patch mag. loads would shoot that S&W 29 loose. I've never done it, so can't say for sure that it's true. Anyone out there know from experience if that is tue or not?

Rev

Adam Helmer
03-10-2008, 03:03 PM
Rev,

Welcome to this Forum; I see this is only your 13th post.

I also like old Colts and Old Smiths. Your M29 load of 8.0 grains of Unique and a 250 grain LSWC bullet is my M29 .44 Special load. I go up a few grains for the M29 Magnum load with the same hard cast bullet. I went to S&W Armorers School twice and asked your question about "shooting loose" the M29.

No, not to worry about shooting loose. Smiths will develop "end shake" after a diet of heavy loads in the .357 and .44 Magnum chamberings. An armorer can correct the problem in 15 minutes, until the next time. I "tune" my Smiths, as needed.

Again, welcome to this site.

Adam

Rev
03-10-2008, 03:18 PM
Thanks Adam for the kind words and especially for that info. on the Smiths. This a great site with many knowledgeable and friendly folks. I do enjoy it here. Thanks again.

Rev

Adam Helmer
03-10-2008, 03:34 PM
Rev,

You are welcome here. Can you explain why your "handle" is Rev? Are you an ordained minister? If so, then double welcome as I will finish Seminary on May 29, 2008.

Adam

Rev
03-10-2008, 11:05 PM
Originally posted by Adam Helmer
Rev,

You are welcome here. Can you explain why your "handle" is Rev? Are you an ordained minister? If so, then double welcome as I will finish Seminary on May 29, 2008.

Adam

Afraid I'm not a minister Adam, I am a dentist. My name is Wilson Revis, therefore the Rev moniker. I'm just hoping that dentists are welcome here too, LOL.

Congrats on making it into seminary and you're almost finished. We can always use more gun toting ministers. Thanks for the warm welcome. I'm going to love it here.

Rev

BILLY D.
03-10-2008, 11:47 PM
Rev an Adam

I worked in a Gun Shop a while back. My main job was to keep customers away from the 'smith so he could get some work done, I was the reception commitee, but I also did some of the grunt work around the shop.

During heavy work periods I did cleaning jobs, buffed barrels for bluing, installed scopes, bore sighting, and custom re-loads, etc. ad nauseam.

The only Smiths that I seen that hit the shop were Model 19's with cracked forcing cones. Any other Smiths that came in were for minor repairs only, like cleaning.

The 19's were really suseptible to hot loading. They found them to be undigestable in large portions.

Best wishes, Bill

Adam Helmer
03-11-2008, 11:20 AM
Rev,

Thanks for the information on your "handle."

Most dentists I have known were also "gun totin" folks. My current dentist shoots on my local trap team. My NH dentist was a big gun collector and reloader.

You passed muster just fine.

Adam

Rev
03-11-2008, 07:02 PM
Originally posted by BILLY D.
Rev an Adam


The only Smiths that I seen that hit the shop were Model 19's with cracked forcing cones. Any other Smiths that came in were for minor repairs only, like cleaning.

The 19's were really suseptible to hot loading. They found them to be undigestable in large portions.

Best wishes, Bill

Billy D, that's what I had always heard. That those K frame .357's just didn't have enough "meat" to stand up to 40,000 psi loads, even though the cylinders didn't bulge with their "new" (1950's) heat treatment. Of course, I had also heard warnings about N frame Smith's suffering from full .41 or .44 mag loads. That, it seems, was incorrect. I've never had a K frame S&W other than a K-22 for a short while.

I'm glad to get some definitive answers on those questions. What a wealth of info there is here!

Rev

Jack
03-12-2008, 01:17 AM
The way I heard the S & W Model 19 story is this: S &W was designing that revolver primarily for the police market. At the time the Model 19 was introduced, the standard routine in most PD's was for the officers to carry 357 duty ammo, but practice with 38 wadcutters or other 38 loads- much less powerful than 357 loads.
Under those conditions, when the 19 had lots of low pressure 38's fired in it, and few 357 magnum loads, the revolver did fine, and had the benefits of being lighter than the N frame, and having a smaller grip for small handed users.
So, everyone was happy.
Until police departments began to do more realistic practice, using the ammo they actually carried in the field- 357 magnum. Then those forcing cone cracks began to appear. Smith introduced the L frame to solve the problem- slightly beefed up over the Model 19's K frame, but not as big and heavy as the N frame of the Model 27 , 28, 29, etc. The first L frames had 3 digit model numbers (as I recall 686 was one) and underlug barrels.
That's the story that was floating around when the L frame was introduced, as best I can recall it. How much is truth and how much is fiction, I really don't know.

BILLY D.
03-12-2008, 03:13 AM
Jack

That is the story 100% correct as I heard it also. If they would have used the 357 mag loads of today the Model 19 would have fared much better. But it seemed everybody wanted 1500fps+ from their 357.

I can vouch for the heaviness of the Model 27. Mine has a 3 1/2" barrel and after a day in the woods you know you have been packing something on your hip.

I love my 27 though, it reminds me of the combat masterpiece I carried when I was a crewmember on Gunships in 'nam. I still got my Water Buffalo Holster I had custom made in Phan Rang.

Now talk about some industrious little folks those Vietnamese were great. We'd bring them 20MM brass and they make salt and pepper shakers out of them and painted little scenes on them. They were beautiful. They also made beautiful ashtrays and beer mugs out of 155 shells. They truly could turn crap into a chocolate bar.

Dad gum, that got me to thinking, I'm gonna have to try to find a Combat masterpiece to put in that holster.

Best wishes, Bill

Adam Helmer
03-12-2008, 07:52 AM
Jack,

You are right about the switch from practice wadcutters to "street loads" for qualification. I was instructing our agents then and the lawsuit effecting the change came out of Tennessee, if I recall correctly.

The ruling stated: Cops will practice/qualify with the SAME ammo they carry in their guns on duty."

Adam

BILLY D.
03-12-2008, 12:27 PM
OOOOPS. Forgot to add, most of the problems occured with light bullets,110 and 125 grainers. Specificaly 125's.

Thats one thing bad about posting late at night, I get too talkative.

Best wishes, Bill

Rev
03-12-2008, 12:42 PM
Originally posted by BILLY D.
OOOOPS. Forgot to add, most of the problems occured with light bullets,110 and 125 grainers. Specificaly 125's.

Thats one thing bad about posting late at night, I get too talkative.

Best wishes, Bill

Not so long ago (25 yrs.?), the 125 gr. bullets were popular in police circles I seem to remember. I think most police depts. require factory rounds for duty. I'd bet the model 19 suffered from those hot old Super Vel .357 loads.

Rev

Jack
03-12-2008, 04:42 PM
That might very well be the case, Rev. Some of the early Super Vel stuff really was hot.
And you're giving away your age if you can remember early Super Vel ammo! :D

Adam Helmer
03-12-2008, 04:59 PM
Jack,

I remember the first month Lee Juras issued his FIRST Super Vel loads. I met Lee a few months later at an Instructors' Convention. I know it dates me- I got my Social Security check in today's mail. Be well.

Adam

Tall Shadow
04-28-2008, 02:46 PM
I must interject my $.02 worth on the "Do S&W revolvers get shot out easy?" debate...

I'd have to say, in my experience....YES! THEY CAN, and Do!

I have personally shot out, or been there when 3 different S&W revolvers have started showing the signs of end shake. It was like you had just upped the powder charge by a few extra grains.....SCARY! :eek:

I have been shooting/reloading for 30+ years, and the two people who's guns we were shooting, have been doing it for 40+, and 30+ years respectively. We were NOT shooting unsafe loads, or mistreating the revolvers in any way.

At the same time I was shooting my Ruger Super Black hawk in .44mag, with no problems......and I Still am shooting the same kind of loads today.

The S&Ws that we were shooting....
A 1960's vintage model 29
A brand new (at the time) model 629 hunter (mag-na-port, if I remember correctly)
Another model 29 of unknown vintage.

All three had been shooting reasonable loadings. They had each had individual loads worked up for them, to assure that they were not going to be running over-pressure loads, or suffer them if temperatures would rise. They were not abused, or mistreated in any way, shape or form.
As I said, I have done the same with My Ruger, and it is still just dandy!

We all love S&W guns......But I would ONLY run factory loads in any that I own.
Save the custom loadings for stronger guns.

My $.02
YMMV

Tall Shadow

Adam Helmer
04-28-2008, 02:58 PM
Tall Shadow,

Thanks for your 2 cents worth on S&W revolvers.

Why is "end shake" a serious problem with a Smith? At the S&W Armorers's School, we routinely removed "end shake" and tuned up the DA Smiths until they needed tuning again. All Smiths will develop endshake if shot enough because of the way the cylinder is mounted.

Ruger revolvers have a solid center pin for the cylinder, so you will not get end shake.

Adam

Rapier
04-29-2008, 07:07 AM
After 25 years of moving steel with a handgun I can say for a fact that the S & W is not very strong at all when compared to the single actions and is not near as strong as the DW guns. I started with a M-27 8 3/8 gun. After two matches it became difficult to keep it together long enough to finish a match so it left home. Over the years, as a match director, I saw many S&W guns come and go, they just would not hold up to heavy bullets with heavy loads.

The suprise gun was the 8 inch silver snake. The Python has a reputation for being weak. However I shot my gun for over two years befor it left home in exchange for two SRMs. When the snake left it was just as accurate as when it arrived, a trophy winner.

I shot two matches a month, practice three times a week and had a range in the back yard. So my guns got a pretty fair work out.
Ed

Adam Helmer
04-29-2008, 09:54 AM
Rapier,

You are correct; S&W heavy caliber revolvers do suffer from heavy loads, both factory and reloads.

The heavy cylinder rotates on the barrel of the yoke. Upon firing, the recoil forces the cylinder FORWARD where it peens the end of the barrel of the yoke. Incrementally, the endshake develops.

A Ruger SA revolver has a solid center pin that does not get the peening a Smith does.

Adam

wrenchman
04-29-2008, 02:55 PM
I am a wheel gun lover it is what i started out on i have my grand fathers smith it is a nice gun but it is a lite gun.
I like the blue on the older guns they just dont do it like that no more.

Rapier
04-29-2008, 03:52 PM
Just realized, I did not intend for my statement to sound like a S&W put down, not at all. I have a lot of respect for the S&W guns. When I decided to carry a handgun, with my rifle, while hunting and not just the handgun by itself, guess what I went looking for? A Smith and why? The old Smith 66 four inch might be one of the finest backup handguns to carry afield ever made. Go look for a used one today, around here they bring new gun prices if you can ever find one for sale....
Ed

Adam Helmer
04-29-2008, 04:14 PM
Rapier,


I did not read your prior post as a Smith put down; rather, I thought you were a fellow S&W Armorer. Heavy caliber Smiths do batter the end of the barrel of the yoke and they need to be adjusted periodically-I do it all the time.

I like old Smiths and tune mine up, as needed. Be well.

Adam