Beginner barrel length question

Thepreparer

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I've tried searching google and got ambiguous answers as to what exactly counts in the measurements.

I saw on this forum in a search that it is measured from the cylinder to the end of the barrel.

Measuring the 610, is measures 3.75". Is that a standard for "4 inch" models? Are Smiths like a 2x4?
 
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Measure from the front of the cylinder to the end of the barrel. If it’s a 4 inch barreled revolver, it should measure fairly close to that stated length and well less than a 1/4 inch variance. No, it shouldn’t measure significantly less than the stated size in the way a 2x4 does.
 
Yes make sure you're measuring from beginning to end of the barrel. The "inner" end of the barrel is called the Forcing Cone and stops just a fraction of an inch from the Cylinder. It's easiest to just measure from tip of barrel to cylinder face.

Here's a model 10 with a 2" barrel.
 

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Revolver barrel length is measured from the face of the cylinder.

S&W barrel lengths are nominal and can vary somewhat from the length specified. I have seen barrels as much as 3/8" shorter than specified length, although only 1/8" is quite commonly seen. A barrel that measures 3 3/4" is probably specified as a 4" barrel. If you have the original box simply check the end label. Typical S&W 2" J-frame revolvers of all calibers are 1 7/8" consistently.

Interestingly the barrels of Colt revolvers usually measure nearly exactly the specified length, to within a few thousandths of an inch.

I originally thought you would be asking what barrel length should a beginner buy.:rolleyes::rolleyes:
 
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Revolver barrel length is measured from the face of the cylinder.

S&W barrel lengths are nominal and can vary somewhat from the length specified. I have seen barrels as much as 3/8" shorter than specified length, although only 1/8" is quite commonly seen. A barrel that measures 3 3/4" is probably specified as a 4" barrel. If you have the original box simply check the end label. Typical S&W 2" J-frame revolvers of all calibers are 1 7/8" consistently.

Interestingly the barrels of Colt revolvers usually measure nearly exactly the specified length, to within a few thousandths of an inch.

I originally thought you would be asking what barrel length should a beginner buy.:rolleyes::rolleyes:

I also expected a request for recommendations on barrel length.

What’s really confusing is that a 4” .45 ACP revolver has a longer breach to muzzle measurement than a 5” 1911. However, you do lose energy at the cylinder gap.
 
I've tried searching google and got ambiguous answers as to what exactly counts in the measurements.

I saw on this forum in a search that it is measured from the cylinder to the end of the barrel.

Measuring the 610, is measures 3.75". Is that a standard for "4 inch" models? Are Smiths like a 2x4?

Is that an unfluted cylinder model?

There were 2 runs of the 3 7/8 inch barreled 610s, one a 610-2 pre-lock and another 610-3 with the IL.
 
I also expected a request for recommendations on barrel length.

What’s really confusing is that a 4” .45 ACP revolver has a longer breach to muzzle measurement than a 5” 1911. However, you do lose energy at the cylinder gap.

Apples and oranges. Revolver barrel length is measured from the face of the cylinder to the muzzle. Semi-automatic barrels are measured from the face of the standing breech to the muzzle, just as rifle and shotgun barrels are. This is just a different standard that is generally well understood. not confusing at all.:rolleyes:

Yes, there is some loss in pressure, that affects velocity, because of the barrel-cylinder gap, but not generally the same as the difference between a 4" and 5" barrel of a firearm of the same type would be. The difference of two different individual firearms of the same make, model, caliber and type can be even greater.
 
Apples and oranges. Revolver barrel length is measured from the face of the cylinder to the muzzle. Semi-automatic barrels are measured from the face of the standing breech to the muzzle, just as rifle and shotgun barrels are. This is just a different standard that is generally well understood. not confusing at all.:rolleyes:

Yes, there is some loss in pressure, that affects velocity, because of the barrel-cylinder gap, but not generally the same as the difference between a 4" and 5" barrel of a firearm of the same type would be. The difference of two different individual firearms of the same make, model, caliber and type can be even greater.
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This is an excellent explanation.
 
Yes it is. It's closer to 3/16 shorter than 1/4 shorter.

So it would be my guess you have a Model 610 that has a stated barrel length of 3&7/8 inches and so the actual length is measuring at 1/16th shorter, which would not be unusual.

In the case of J-frames with a 1&7/8 inch barrel, Smith & Wesson does in fact state the length as precisely that. However, many in the gun community refer to them as 2 inch.
 

So it would be my guess you have a Model 610 that has a stated barrel length of 3&7/8 inches and so the actual length is measuring at 1/16th shorter, which would not be unusual…

Does S&W actually state this in their literature? I have never seen this.


…In the case of J-frames with a 1&7/8 inch barrel, Smith & Wesson does in fact state the length as precisely that. However, many in the gun community refer to them as 2 inch…

For decades, S&W referred to the barrel length as 2”. The 1 7/8” is a fairly recent innovation due to folks not understanding +/- tolerances.

Kevin
 
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