Careful with your LEO trade-in revolver

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(See post 24 in this thread for the resolution of my saga)

Like a few of you I couldn't resist the President's Day pricing at guns.com on their LEO trade in Model 65's. I posted earlier about info concerning where it might have come from based on markings Info please on my 65-4

A little over a week ago I took this Model 65 to the ranch and ran exactly 12 rounds through it - all of them over a chronograph. All were the same handload, with a 158 grain poly-coated lead bullet, producing an average velocity of 1157 fps with a small standard deviation and a high velocity of 1178 fps. Nothing unusual was noted and all shots were on a metal target at seven yards.

After the 12th shot the cylinder released with great difficulty requiring a sharp rap of the heel of my hand. Upon examination the barrel was at a discernible angle of several degrees down relative to the topstrap and the barrel had a very obvious separation from the frame at the topstrap.

There is no possibility of a double charge of powder. A double charge would have more than filled the case and that did not occur. Further, all velocities were under 1178 fps and no pressure signs were observed in any of the fired cases. The cylinder remains in excellent shape.

I examined this revolver carefully when it was received. There was a noticeable gap between the barrel and frame adjacent to the topstrap larger than any other S&W revolver I own but it did not seem alarming - perhaps it should have (it can be seen in the photos of my previous thread). The timing of the revolver appeared in perfect order before I fired the 12 rounds and nothing out of the ordinary was noted during the discharge of those 12 rounds.

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I'm no expert but I'm pretty sure this Model 65 is now a paperweight

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The downward cant of the barrel as indicated by the still intact ejector rod.

I had no intentions of feeding this Model 65 anything like a steady diet of .357 magnum loads. I've learned through this forum that the K-frame .357's aren't meant for that but the occasional moderate .357 load should be fine and stick with projectiles weighing more than 125 grains. That's what I did; I loaded some fairly moderate .357 cartridges to see what I had. I accomplished that goal; I know what I have.

Is it possible that the years this revolver spent at the correctional facility in Central Pennsylvania were tough ones digesting a good amount of full-power .357 magnum loads? Is it further possible that over time that diet took its toll? It's hard for me to characterize this as anything except an accident waiting for a time and place to happen.

The good news, especially for all of you who may have purchased one of these from guns.com, is that they appear to be standing behind it. Despite being beyond their three day return policy limit they have asked me to return the firearm and have sent the necessary materials to do that. I am grateful to guns.com for their concern.

Be careful.

Bryan
 

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I’ve had a couple of security turn-ins, and more than a few correctional and police guns.

The common feature in the security and prison guns for me was the high holster wear but low round count, as evidenced by lack of internal wear and flame-cutting.

I would be very surprised if the corrections department guns had much more than annual qualifying rounds down the pipe during their service.

I would file this under “stuff happens” and thank the vendor for the replacement or refund.
 
... ran exactly 12 rounds through it - all of them over a chronograph. All were the same handload ...
The good news, especially for all of you who may have purchased one of these from guns.com, is that they appear to be standing behind it. Despite being beyond their three day return policy limit they have asked me to return the firearm and have sent the necessary materials to do that. I am grateful to guns.com for their concern.

Be careful.

Bryan
They are a good place to do business with if they make this right, especially if you told them you were shooting handloads. That often voids any warranty. Keep us posted.
 
I agree, no PD, Corrections or State Police organization is going to do much damage to a gun from shooting. At most you might get qualification four times a year and a lot of the training/practice if you will would be done with milder loads. We shot our revolvers a lot, and went over board on training compared to most agencies and the only damage expected to the gun was eventually timing and end shake, and most guys wouldn't know if they saw it.

Now, the gun could have been used as a pry bar or such or someone botched a re-barrel job and eliminated the threads or something.

Added: Could have been botched at the factory as well, but would be unusual.
 
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Makes me wonder if that one got dropped off a watch tower or something else traumatic. Maybe pinched in the holster in a heavy door. Whatever it was it certainly caused major damage. Maybe just the barrel is fried; maybe the barrel and frame. The good thing is the selling dealer is taking it back.
 
I toyed all that weekend with getting a 65-5. But by the time I paid handling fee tax and ffl I my end it went from 449 to like 579. I decided it was to much for a gun I could not inspect. Even though they were “certified” used I’d still have to pay ffl again if returned. I didn’t like that they were advertised as free shipping but then hit u with a 13.99 handling fee.if I found them local at 449 I’d probably buy 2.......... are u getting refund or new gun .
 
There is no way that shooting a normal gun would do that. Something is wrong with the barrel or frame where the barrel screws in.

It looks like the barrel broke off where the shank meets the main barrel. That's a good place for a stress riser, and if the barrel was too tightly torqued on (many are), a crack in that area is a good probability. Look inside the barrel and see if you can see a crack at the top at the front of the frame.
 
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Doubt if I'm getting a replacement as I believe they show they're out of them. I requested a refund before they authorized the send-back.

I agree it would be "unusual" for a revolver with this history to have been over-used. I have a half-dozen former LEO firearms and they have all functioned fine for several and many years. This Model 65 is/was clean and passed all visual inspections with a 10X hand lens - with the exception of the small(er) gap where now there is a large gap.

Nonetheless there was a problem and I simply ask you to put the first rounds through your recent acquisition in a gentle manner and pay attention.
 
Have you looked down the forcing cone? No frame damage at all?
Maybe rebarrel it if its worth it
 
Wow, and I thought the model 64 I got from them was bad! This is just the gamble you take when you get a used revolver sight unseen. At least they are refunding you.
 
Wasn't there a "batch" of S&W of corrections revolvers that had problems similar/same as OP. I don't remember the exact specifics or date. It came up 10+ yrs ago in a M329 thread. As I recall, all of those guns were replaced. Might want to contact S&W as they should have model and serial numbers affected.

FWIW,

Paul
 
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Have you looked down the forcing cone? No frame damage at all?
Maybe rebarrel it if its worth it

There is frame damage. The topstrap is "warped" over the forcing cone. More prevalent on the left side than the right but visible if one looks at it in the right light and at the right angle. Hard to imagine the threads aren't buggered. Looks to me as if the salvageable portion is the cylinder and ejector rod assembly but that's just my visual opinion. The gun has been sent on its way back whence it came.

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You can see in this pic the cylinder no longer fits in the frame indicating the topstrap is no longer true. Circled area is the warp. No cracks anywhere noticeable during my visual inspection with a 10X hand lens.
 

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There is frame damage. The topstrap is "warped" over the forcing cone. More prevalent on the left side than the right but visible if one looks at it in the right light and at the right angle. Hard to imagine the threads aren't buggered. Looks to me as if the salvageable portion is the cylinder and ejector rod assembly but that's just my visual opinion. The gun has been sent on its way back whence it came.

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You can see in this pic the cylinder no longer fits in the frame indicating the topstrap is no longer true. Circled area is the warp. No cracks anywhere noticeable during my visual inspection with a 10X hand lens.

Does the warp show from the gun's 12 o'clock (the sight channel)?
 
I was a cop for 30 years and never qualified more than twice a year in all that time. The only exception was that our SWAT officers were required to qualify monthly.
 
There is frame damage. The topstrap is "warped" over the forcing cone. More prevalent on the left side than the right but visible if one looks at it in the right light and at the right angle. Hard to imagine the threads aren't buggered. Looks to me as if the salvageable portion is the cylinder and ejector rod assembly but that's just my visual opinion. The gun has been sent on its way back whence it came.

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You can see in this pic the cylinder no longer fits in the frame indicating the topstrap is no longer true. Circled area is the warp. No cracks anywhere noticeable during my visual inspection with a 10X hand lens.

Couldn't this warpage be caused by installing a barrel? I'm thinking someone locked the barrel in a vice then stuck a pipe through the cylinder opening and tried to torque it till the sights lined up.
Maybe the original barrel was changed out. That, or this is the original barrel, and the sights didn't line up, and someone tried to line them up by forcing the barrel on tighter.
 

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