DWalt
Member
The standard references say that the 1902-first change began at SN 33804. So yours should be a first change.
So, does your Revolver then have the "5th Screw" as they say? Or...not?
The standard references say that the 1902-first change began at SN 33804. So yours should be a first change.
No, my SB 1902 has no 5th screw (cylinder bolt stop screw) at the trigger guard. That's what the folks on our team (there are SB 1902's team) use to distinguish the 1905. The TG screw was an engineering change that created the 1905, to us. The other team uses the butt shape relying on S&W sales department nomenclature. I believe those are the two teams differing positions. The 1902 1st change includes the barrel shape or enlargement at the frame.
I don't see this as much of a team thing, as if this were a competition.
Using anachronistic collector terminology based on technicalities can have certain advantages in specific circumstances. That's why the whole "change" thing was invented in the first place, long after the fact.
But calling the guns what they were called by the people who made them, sold them, and bought and used them is more practical in most situations. Reducing this to the "sales dept." to give it less weight is a sleigh of hand unsupported by any record.
Absent proof to the contrary, the company, not just the sales department, used the butt shape to distinguish the 1902 from the 1905, until the end of WW I, when it all went away. So did the retailers who sold the guns. And therefore most likely the customers. In other words, pretty much everybody who mattered. And that's what matters most.
...Reducing this to the "sales dept." to give it less weight is a sleigh of hand unsupported by any record.
Thanks Absalom for these further in depth elaborations..!
What an interesting conflict!
I can see both side's orders of reasoning, and, I can not imagine a mutually agreeable solution, or a 'twain shall meet', which would satisfy both sides.
However...to my own mind anyway, if the distinction between 1902 and 1905 were to be based solely on the Round Butt verses Square Butt, I have to wonder - how would one respect and state the 'changes' position or status ( 3rd change, 4th change, 5th change, etc ) represented in an example of a Round Butt K Frame made in 1914, 1921 or 1939?
Eeeeek!
Very simple. Don't use the "changes" - They are also inventions of collectors done long after the fact, and never used originally by S&W. Go by just the SN. That will date the gun and by reference tell you all you need to know. I detest using "changes" precisely because they are so arbitrary. Another of my detestations is the term "Transition" (which I refuse to use) but I won't go into that now.
jebstuart - Have you confirmed what date your square butt '02 shipped? That would help identifying it, or am I missing something.
....., it always seems weird to me that S&W goes silent on numbered changes for the .38 M&P after 1915. So when exactly does a Model of 1905 4th change become just a .38 Military & Police model? ....
Oyeboten , I have an identical revolver to yours only a little later 59Xxx. This revolver was shipped in 1905. This is a 1902 1st change, 4 screw, dual caliber .38 special. Bill
I can see referring to specific "changes" when it means something in a specific context, like to denote the relative production timeline of the OP's 1902 in this case. However, it always seems weird to me that S&W goes silent on numbered changes for the .38 M&P after 1915. So when exactly does a Model of 1905 4th change become just a .38 Military & Police model? I would think that the change of the hammer block in the mid-twenties would be significant enough to be marked in nomenclature somehow due to the non-compatibility between triggers and hands (5th change?). Or what about the long/short action change (8th or 9th change)? Of course, then we would have "Model of 1905 M&P umpteenth change" which would be completely ridiculous.
For me the change nomenclature is only useful as timeline markers for dating guns and not so much for describing them anyway. I'm good with ".38 Military & Police model from 1941" or whatever. Maybe that's why they came up with the "dash" model number system. The ".38 M&P Hand Ejector dash 6" just doesn't sound right. But that might eliminate some of the other debates about "transitional" and "Pre-model" this or that. But then we would still have the oddball mix and match overlap guns to deal with and probably just invent something else to argue about. I give up.
The whole 1902/05 SB/RB debate makes my head hurt. Some day may we all grok it in fullness. Waiting is.
Does yours have the tiny little Patent dates on the bottom rounded outside edge of the left Hard Rubber Stock?
( Mine does...I'll post a picture further down, I was surprised it has them. )