This and the 2 1/2" 19 are truly the Cadillacs of snubbies!I have shown this one a few times before but it is appropriate. It came from the factory with the red ramp and white outline sights back on Sep. 3, 1974. The sharp shoulder magnas added later by me.
View attachment 779718
In the bottom picture, what model am I looking at? The profile looks like a 638 but I don't think that they did them in blue. So fill me in, please. And the maker of the shoes, too!![]()
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Always a great choice.
Wood is pretty. My old beat hands need comfort. My guns get shot and carried. As pretty as wood is, it doesn't work for me.
They are thumpers for sure! I had a little trouble putting a box of .38 defense rounds through my old 442-1. The last ten or so made it kind of hard to focus! Factory grips would make me bleed.Good wood grips can do anything with proper design, IMO. I'm partial to combat grips for their finger grooves. In the South, shooting in the summer often becomes a challenge for sweat.
I suppose in a .357 J-frame rubber grips would be better for frame backstrap recoil. I know mine stings when I shoot it.
You have four (4) awesome snubies there.Please forgive the silver one. It was lonely in the safe.
I always like the Colt Lawman two inch. Thank you for sharing.Come to think of it, Im feeling a bit snubby myself.
View attachment 780721J Frames - 43c and M&P340
K Frames - 64-2 and 10-7
L Frame - 386PD
Colt J Frame "Lawman"
They are thumpers for sure! I had a little trouble putting a box of .38 defense rounds through my old 442-1. The last ten or so made it kind of hard to focus! Factory grips would make me bleed.
If bad things are happening you won't feel the recoil. Until later when you're trying to figure out how your hand got bruised!.38s were never an issue for me. Part of that might be the longer grips I swapped onto my J-frames. I got ALL my fingers on the grip, not leaving the pinky hanging out there. Spreads the felt recoil across the entire hand, so (for me) it meant no-pain shooting.
My .357 J-frames required a steep learning curve for me. Recoil isn't horrific but tolerable in a steel frame. But man, get it into an alloy frame & all of the sudden your hand HURTS after only a few shots. I did learn to NOT fight the recoil but to ride it upwards, letting the movement of my arm dissipate some of the energy. It helps, but I can only tolerate a single cylinder in the alloy. But I figure in a poop-has-hit-the-fan moment, the adrenaline will take over.
How funny..... I married that girl, and until she passed away last year, she was perfect!!!I always admire pretty girls....the ones in overalls and covered in dirt are the ones to marry!
Function over form......
I don't normally change grips unless the gun doesn't quite fit my hand. I do have pachmyars on my LCR, and on some of them I have added slip on hogues, but for the most part they carry factories. I shoot everything I own, and am not all that interested in looks. I suppose if they were displayed that would be a different story. I do, however, have a whole lot of holsters.They are thumpers for sure! I had a little trouble putting a box of .38 defense rounds through my old 442-1. The last ten or so made it kind of hard to focus! Factory grips would make me bleed.
I don't normally change grips unless the gun doesn't quite fit my hand. I do have pachmyars on my LCR, and on some of them I have added slip on hogues, but for the most part they carry factories. I shoot everything I own, and am not all that interested in looks. I suppose if they were displayed that would be a different story. I do, however, have a whole lot of holsters.