BLACKHAWKNJ
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2006
- Messages
- 6,157
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There was that small batch of brushed nickel M-28s made for the Florida Highway Patrol, some members have them as family heirlooms.
KalamazooKid,
It was MC Sporting Goods in Grand Rapids. I went to Western, graduated in 1982. Have lived out west ever since.
We used to drive to Bob's in Hastings, is it still there?
Dan
I can't believe the number of 10s we sold. It was the Glock 19 of it's time. Everyone bought one. If you wanted a gun at the time, you bought a Model 10. I remember selling 2" and 4" most. We sold pencil barrels and heavy barrels. I never could understand it.
This reminds me of a gun shop I found in Syracuse NY sometime around 2008 or so. My son was on a school function, and since my infant daughter started running a fever the day before, we decided our "family trip" would become me taking our son out and my wife staying home with our daughter. So, I had time on my own to kill.
I found this place (don't worry it's gone now, I've checked...) and it was like stepping into a time capsule. He had racks and racks of used stuff, but his new inventory was like a day in the life, ca. 1977!!
He had new Ithaca Model 37s in 12, 16, and 20 gauge, all the popular barrel lengths/chokes, with the tags on them. In terms of Smiths, I saw lots of N frames sitting on top of the wood presentation cases in the glass pistol case, plus 52s, 41s,...
It was AMAZING.
KalamazooKid,
It was MC Sporting Goods in Grand Rapids. I went to Western, graduated in 1982. Have lived out west ever since.
We used to drive to Bob's in Hastings, is it still there?
Dan
I was stationed at Fort Drum, N.Y. back in the nineties (1996-2000) and there was a gun-shop run by a retired New York state trooper in the nearby town of Black River. He was the same way with all the "old guns". I was an enlisted man with a young family so even a $100 was a big deal, but I spent many hours in that shop. We just don't have those type of gun-shops here in southwestern Idaho. Here it's all about the big box stores with their inventories of new firearms and even the independents focus on semi-auto handguns and semi-auto rifles. Guess I'm getting old.
Right at the end of Maple Street! ......... wasn't quite the enthusiast I am now and didn't pay too much attention to his stock. No doubt he had some real treats on those shelves.
Hair Trigger; Now said:I have the same goal in mind with a slight variation. I have a 66, a 19 and a 686. I am looking for a 27 and a 586, or different barrel length's in 19's, 66's, or 686's. The goal is to have as many S&W .357's as I can but different variations. I also will stick to adjustable sight models just because I like them better