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#1
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Picked this up today. Serial number 197XX. Matching serial numbers. Timing is good. Very little endshake. Appears to be the original finish. Clean bore. Paid $375.00 for it at a local pawnshop. I'm very excited with my find. Notice it looks like a colt. In 1902 S&W went with the locking lug in front of the ejector rod. It's a 38 special. A little over 20,000 of this configuration were made between 1899 - 1902.
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#2
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It makes the 1911 look young. Really nice gun man, gotta love pawn shops and the random stuff they get from time to time.
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#3
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Quote:
This is one of those revolvers that I never expected to see in person. Figured I would look at photos and maybe see one in a museum. |
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#4
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Very sweet. Plan on doing any shooting with it?
__________________
A man's got to know his limitations. |
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#5
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Yes I do, but it will 38 special 158 grain LRN only. I looked it over today and tonight I will take off the side plate for a closer look. But there are no bulges or cracks that I can see. The bore is clean and the timing is good.
I also will not be using it for any marathon shooting sessions. It's an old timer and will be treated as such. |
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#6
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Nice. Really beautiful, old Smiths are uncommon here (Colt dominates the "old revolver in good condition" market)
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#7
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Well the pearl grips aren't S&W. They are aftermarket, but they are period correct. So here it is. Not normally my thing, but somehow these grips just seem right. My 1900 New Orleans Cathouse revolver.
Last edited by Jcordell; 02-09-2011 at 05:08 PM. |
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#8
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Not concealable nor low quality enough. Tiny, generic, nickel-plated, .32 break-top revolver FTW
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#9
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Quote:
Last edited by Jcordell; 02-09-2011 at 08:49 PM. |
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