American1776
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Yesterday I went to a large LGS that always has a big stock of items. I knew I was going to buy a stainless J-frame 640, so I figured I'd check out all their inventory to pick the 'best' one.
I inspected 10 revolvers total. All new in box. Seven 640's, and three 649's. Every single one of these revolvers had various 'problems'.
1) Poorly indexed barrel. Nearly all of the 10 had, to varying degrees, a barrel that was not clocked to 12. A few were VERY bad, and so crooked that one corner of the squared barrel was about touching the square corner of the frame.
2) Forcing cone problems: four of the revolvers had a forcing cone that had sharp metal shavings on the inside of the cone. four of them had forcing cones of inconsistent thickness.
3) Only two of the ten guns had cylinders that locked up tightly with the trigger back. The other eight had noticeable slop in the cylinder in full lockup.
4) Crane to frame slop: 4 of the revolvers had a crane that would slightly open up when lateral pressure was applied to the cylinder.
The gun I bought was a model 640. Good forcing cone, straight barrel, extremely tight lock up with trigger back. The only issue was a crane to frame slop when outward pressure applied to cylinder. I would call it 'wiggle' between frame and crane. However, when I hold the trigger back, the wiggle is very minimal, because the hand engagement and the locking bolt are so tight, it holds the crane in line pretty darn well.
So there's an update on stainless J-frame inspection. I'm NOT whining or complaining---just reporting the facts as I observed.
I'd say that 8 out of the 10 guns I inspected would shoot just fine, and would work for 90 percent of gun owners who shoot it once or twice a year, and put it in a drawer or safe. The only ones I think would have problems are the forcing cone metal shavings (which could screw up the bullet), and the badly indexed barrels that could lead to frame crack or really poor accuracy.
I inspected 10 revolvers total. All new in box. Seven 640's, and three 649's. Every single one of these revolvers had various 'problems'.
1) Poorly indexed barrel. Nearly all of the 10 had, to varying degrees, a barrel that was not clocked to 12. A few were VERY bad, and so crooked that one corner of the squared barrel was about touching the square corner of the frame.
2) Forcing cone problems: four of the revolvers had a forcing cone that had sharp metal shavings on the inside of the cone. four of them had forcing cones of inconsistent thickness.
3) Only two of the ten guns had cylinders that locked up tightly with the trigger back. The other eight had noticeable slop in the cylinder in full lockup.
4) Crane to frame slop: 4 of the revolvers had a crane that would slightly open up when lateral pressure was applied to the cylinder.
The gun I bought was a model 640. Good forcing cone, straight barrel, extremely tight lock up with trigger back. The only issue was a crane to frame slop when outward pressure applied to cylinder. I would call it 'wiggle' between frame and crane. However, when I hold the trigger back, the wiggle is very minimal, because the hand engagement and the locking bolt are so tight, it holds the crane in line pretty darn well.
So there's an update on stainless J-frame inspection. I'm NOT whining or complaining---just reporting the facts as I observed.
I'd say that 8 out of the 10 guns I inspected would shoot just fine, and would work for 90 percent of gun owners who shoot it once or twice a year, and put it in a drawer or safe. The only ones I think would have problems are the forcing cone metal shavings (which could screw up the bullet), and the badly indexed barrels that could lead to frame crack or really poor accuracy.