revolver_ph
Member
Looks off to me. Barrel too far counterclockwise viewed from the rear.
It looks fairly straight to me. Look at it from the muzzle end, dead on, and see if the front sight blade looks torqued compared to the notch in the rear sight.
Here is my trail of returns with a 640-1 Pro Series model...
The revolver was new in the box as sent from S&W directly to me via my local gun shop. Among several other issues, the gun had an "over-clocked" barrel like yours.
Here is what I learned in the process of the four trips back to S&W and two new barrels being installed.
They initially untwisted the barrel enough to straighten it. However, as rounds are sent down the tube the rifling torques the barrel tighter and it returned to the original over-clocked position. Mine took about 6-8 month to re-twist to the original position. The original barrel shot about 3" low at 15 yards.
When I sent it back the second time they replace the original barrel. The new barrel was straight, but it shot about 6" lower than the point of aim at 15 yards. I sent it back again.
After the third trip to the mothership they replaced the barrel a second time and now it shoots to point of aim. They however forgot to etch "357 MAG" on the barrel and the tritium sights they put on this latest barrel were dead.
After the forth time back they finish production on this gun and it finally shoots where the sights point and all issues have been resolved. Did I mention it is advertised as a "Professional Series" gun?
Good luck with your revolver and getting it to shoot straight. Persistence pays off and based on my experience one time back may not be enough... It may take four! Let us know how thing go. As a bonus, at least S&W covers shipping both ways.
Edmo
On edit: Below is a video of me shooting my 640-1 Pro Series prior to the third trip back to the mothership.
Shooting My S&W 640 Pro - YouTube
Don't worry - they've now got you covered with the 2-piece barrels. However, the 60-Pro doesn't have one.Miss the days of pinned barrels.![]()