Jack Flash
Member
... It’s hard to see what the British would have wanted with an obsolete-calibered gun like yours at that time.
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... It’s hard to see what the British would have wanted with an obsolete-calibered gun like yours at that time.
…
1917 Year of manufacturer site here:
U.S. Military Dates of Manufacture
Click on 1917 S&W and plug in your serial #
That website gives the year on one line followed by the month on the next line of print.Hi Kevin where did you see October ? In my search it only appears the year.
Regards, Ray
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Yes, there is a flaming bomb. You can also see a broad arrow. I can't make out anything else but I wouldn't be surprised if there is a crown, etc. there too.
Jack:
Are you interpreting the scratch (red arrow) as a broad arrow? Or is there something else I'm missing?
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My question also. When I get home I will look closer at the frame.
Kevin
It's a scratch. Way too high for the broad arrow location which is lower down by the knuckle/grip frame hump.
See post #3 here: http://smith-wessonforum.com/s-w-ha...-lock-wwi-british-markings.html#post137889628
Looked there, all over the frame, no broad arrow of any sort.
Kevin
Yes.Did the broad arrow sho acceptance by the British military? I do not think this revolver saw British service. It may have made it overseas and somehow been brought into England and sold but I do not believe it was ever a British military revolver.
Kevin
Yes.
The scratch sure looked like the somewhat curved version of the Broad Arrow to me. I'll have to magnify it and look again.
Has anyone seen the sideways crown on sitting on ?? before? Or am I imagining that too? (See below)
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Did the broad arrow sho acceptance by the British military? I do not think this revolver saw British service. It may have made it overseas and somehow been brought into England and sold but I do not believe it was ever a British military revolver.
Kevin