S&W Sheriffs 357 Special Exploded Today.

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im not too sure about that Black Knight, i have a colt police positive spl. made in 1914 that will only accept 38 special ammo. i tried to drop 357 mags in the cyl. a minute ago and they dont fit. im not trying to sound like a know it all, just saying i dont see that as an issue. ill bet your friends gun was modified.

In actual fact many of the early .38 Long Colt revolvers WILL accept a .357 magnum round! But they were mostly made in the late 1880s and 1890s in a quick succession of models. Many being US Army issue. The very revolvers whose impotency led to the .45 ACP and the M1911.
 
Hey guys I just had the same problem as OP with my S&W .38 Assault Magnum. Whole barrel flew down range and now there's a live round stuck in chamber. I'm sending it to smith in hopes they can unstuck the chambered round and fix the gun. While it's there I'm thinking a refinish and trigger job is in order.
 
The most common cause that I have seen in revolvers was
from firing 1/2jacket bullets at low velocity. The core separates
and leaves jacket in barrel ( obstruction) core exits and shooter
fires again bulging barrel. I saw one 1911 suffer same fate.
There was a outbreak of this in 80s. The only one I remember
that did more than bulge barrel was a HI Standard stub nose
357. It bulged right in front of cone and cracked the frame
enough barrel fell out.
 
I love it -- there's an account that is clearly either wrong in its details or an outright fabrication, and everyone's got an opinion of what happened.

Is it any wonder I consider 50% of everything I read on gun forums to be pure bunk?

Just like any rumor; believe half of what you see and none of what you hear.
 
Just as an aside -- I still think the original post was very fishy -- there was a problem when S&W first started using two-piece barrels on some models with barrels being launched downrange. Nothing to do with the ammo, just a manufacturing problem.
 
Spend enough time around steel barstock and you will see all kinds of defects. All it takes to cause a failure such as this is a defect in "just the wrong spot". What happens is simple. The flaw causes what is described in Engineering as a Stress Riser. Depending on the magnitude it can create a "weak spot" that has anyhing between 1 and 99 % of the strength of an adjacent area. The only way to prevent these flaws from reaching the end user is to X Ray every single inch of the basic stock. Something that NASA can do when sending someone to the moon but it's a process that is just too expensive for normal production products. BTW, there is also the matter of the person "reading" the X ray and getting it wrong, something that is disturbingly common.

Good news is that these types of failures happen often enough that S&W will simply tell the customer to chose a new model that is in stock and similar to the damaged revolver. Bad news is that if the revolver was made before 1989 it was made under different ownership and S&W will not warranty product produced by the previous owners of the company.
 
Back in the 1950's I was on patrol in the desert and practicing with .38 wadcutters and a Colt .38 Spl. Border Patrol revolver. I fired one of the wadcutter reloads and apparently there wasn't any powder. The cap just propelled the lead about halfway down the barrel. So I was walking back to the jeep to get the oil dipstick and push the lead out of the barrel. And lo! Strange thing happened! A rabbit jumped up and I drew and fired! The shot nearly knocked me down and stung my hand. Both wadcutters cleared the barrel. But no damage other than to my pride for doing something so stupid. Fortunately I was alone. Those old Colts stood up to a lot of abuse.

Did you get the rabbit?
 
Was it a hotter round? A squid load?

You can feel a squid load, it's that different. Stop do not fire the next round. One must be very alert when shooting.

I had a squid load about 42 years ago. Never reload with distractions. I caught it in my ruger SBH 7 1/2" barrel. I pushed the bullet out. No powder. Never made that mistake again. I do not talk to anyone when reloading. I check, each round after charging in the bullet tray. I check it again just before the bullet is seated.
 
im not too sure about that Black Knight, i have a colt police positive spl. made in 1914 that will only accept 38 special ammo. i tried to drop 357 mags in the cyl. a minute ago and they dont fit. im not trying to sound like a know it all, just saying i dont see that as an issue. ill bet your friends gun was modified.


Dainman: It may have been certain models as I know his particular one had been bored straight through. I also talked to a local gunshop owner at the time who confirmed that Colt did that with some revolvers. It was cheaper than boring and leaving the throat area in the cylinder. Also it is possible that someone may have had the cylinder bored to except 357 Magnum ammo. He bought the gun used so he had no idea what its true history was.
 
The original Colt .38 and .41 D.A. revolvers (ca. 1889) used a heel-type bullet, like a .22 rimfire. Since the bullets were full case diameter there was no need for chamber throats, so as a result any round of similar diameter not longer than the cylinder (including .357 Magnum) can fully seat. At some point the .38 Long Colt converted to a standard bullet and Colt machined the charge holes accordingly.
 
I'm thinking it's either BS or the gun in question was a J frame 357, this the "sheriff special"

Sent from my XT1650 using Tapatalk
 
I'm thinking it's either BS or the gun in question was a J frame 357, this the "sheriff special"

Sent from my XT1650 using Tapatalk

It's just hard to believe a barrel breaking off and going flying while leaving the section with threads still in the frame.

Not impossible I suppose, but very unlikely.
 
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