bannockburn
Member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2007
- Messages
- 26,313
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All you need now is a Model 14 and your S&W K Frame Trifecta will be complete!
All you need now is a Model 14 and your S&W K Frame Trifecta will be complete!
According to Lucky Gunner's Guide to Smith & Wesson .38 Special & .357 Magnum Revolvers I might also need a 315, but I have a good start anyway.aaaaa
All you need now is a Model 14 and your S&W K Frame Trifecta will be complete!
WOW!!!!! Score of the century at those prices....I assumed the condition would be horrible in your first post, but those are nice.Went up this am first thing and grabbed them. Here they are:
Forgot to mention that at the same GS this dude who works there, was playing with a couple of the used revolvers, cycling the cylinder with the trigger but the hammer was coming down gently, so stopped short of actually dropping the hammer. I tried it on my S&W Model 28 and it was not easy, but on my Charter Arms Bulldog .45 Colt it is really easy. Not sure what the value of doing this is, other than maybe to impress a novice (I was temporarily impressed), but wonder if it has value to learn trigger discipline (whatever that means) or if maybe it is bad for the gun, causing undue wear.S&W Model 10 with 5-inch barrel, priced at $450.
Forgot to mention that at the same GS this dude who works there, was playing with a couple of the used revolvers, cycling the cylinder with the trigger but the hammer was coming down gently, so stopped short of actually dropping the hammer.
I do that slowly to see if I can hear the cylinder lock.
I'm not a revolver expert- I saw my gunsmith do it once, and I assume that's what he's doing.