To properly outfit a large Department with revolvers, you need to look at the whole job, not just the shooters. I'm a retired guy from the NYPD. The good shooters, who take it seriously will do well with whatever you give them. The reality is that a LARGE percentage will show up at the range twice a year, attain a passing score, then go back to spilling coffee into their holsters until next time. In 1990 when I went on patrol with a 4" NY-1 loaded with 158 grain LSWC's, (pre NYCLAD),and a 2" NY-1 in my belt, I was complaining about not having a 9MM, but never felt I couldn't address anything that came up during the tour. The 64's available in 4" and 3" as a patrol gun allowed a broad range of average shooters to do fairly well on the range as well as on the road.
Give'em K frame's!
OK, this is a fantasy question for revolver enthusiasts. I am a reading a book about classic revolvers and am on a chapter about the old SW M&P and the Colt OP revolvers and a question came to mind.
Assume you are the man in charge of firearm procurement for a large city PD and your local government has lost its mind (that could never happen, right?). You have been ordered to replace all current service pistols with a revolver. Must be 38 SP (or .357 but only 38 ammo would be allowed) double action, US manufacture, and box stock, no modifications of any kind. You have some budget flexibility but can't go crazy with the cost, and PC models are out (not that it has to be a S&W at all).
What revolver would you pick from the current stable of products, and why?
Did the baby arrive in the box?
Obviously the best choice is the yet to be announced new 7 shot L frame cap and ball .38 caliber percussion revolver. They will have push button yoke removal, a feature stolen from Taurus. DA combined with quick cylinder swaps will give the good guys a firepower advantage over the bad guys who of course will eagerly trade in all their automatics for Italian cap and ball Colt reproductions.
Just like during the good old days non-LEO buyers will bid the price of also yet to be announced cap and ball N frame .44s up to double retail.
If the dept was big enough for a sizable order, I would have S&W make a special run gun for my guys. Would be all stainless with 3" barrel, 8 shot with NO INTERNAL LOCK and bobbed hammer so NO single action set up with some sort of night sight combination on top.
A revolver of this type is going to put the officer at a disadvantage when confronted with a long gun armed adversary. To enable a measured response to such a threat, I'd add a quality 16" barrel folding stock AR with light and red dot to each patrol unit's standard load out, in a lock rack between the front seats.
A revolver of this type is going to put the officer at a disadvantage when confronted with a long gun armed adversary. To enable a measured response to such a threat, I'd add a quality 16" barrel folding stock AR with light and red dot to each patrol unit's standard load out, in a lock rack between the front seats.