aterry33
Member
Saw one of these at the range today. It looks a lot like a 629 chambered in 44 Special, I am wondering if there're other differences as well?
The 624 is the stainless steel version of the .44 Special Target Model of 1950, which predated the .44 Magnum gun and cartridge by 6 years.
While both are built on the target sight, square butt N frame, the 624 has a tapered, slender barrel profile and a shorter cylinder, the cylinder not needing to be as long, as the Special cartridge is shorter than the Magnum.
The 624 is, basically, a lighter, handier, faster handling handgun that shoots a somewhat less powerful cartridge than the 629.
I think it was Skeeter Skelton who wrote an article saying that when S&W re-introduced they M24 in the early '80s for a short time they were quickly all sold out. It was supposed to be a limited production run, and many of the buyers were collectors. Seeing the popularity they announced they would make more, which upset some collectors who thought they were getting a limited edition revolver. So they came up with the idea of the 624 in stainless, which would fill the needs of shooters without upsetting the collectors of the M24. Ironically, now the 624 is just as sought after, as it too was a limited edition, and now today they are again making the M24 in the Classics line.
That's the history. I own a 4" I bought about ten years ago and love it. They are great revolvers, and any .44 Spl. is just plain COOL.
I have a 624 that had the 4 inch barrel on it. I wanted a heavier barrel, so I bought a 6 inch Model 29 barrel and installed it on the 624 frame. I had to shorten the end of the barrel to get the barrel/cylinder gap I wanted, and then re-cut the forcing cone. It is very accurate and I really like shooting it.