38/44 HD 45 Colt conversion

You may never know for sure who did the conversion. It should be a fun shooter and it oozes character! It appears to have the prewar long action, is it a prewar (WWII) or a postwar Heavy Duty?
 
You may never know for sure who did the conversion. It should be a fun shooter and it oozes character! It appears to have the prewar long action, is it a prewar (WWII) or a postwar Heavy Duty?

I was assuming pre war too from the action?

:::Edited to add:::looks like the date of manufacture is late 1947-early 1948
 
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You may never know for sure who did the conversion.

Right, gunsmiths are not good about marking their work and when they do it is often something cryptic that you almost have to be a prior customer to recognize.

The guy who had started on my .357 to .44 conversion had done three .357 to .45 Colt conversions. He had found two NOS M26 barrels and one M25. He fitted them up to M27 and M28 actions but sent the cylinders out to be rechambered. OAL was a bit limited but he had the mold for it and they shot well. The ones with tapered barrels looked great but the M25 heavy barrel's rib did not match up with the .357's topstrap. It held down the recoil of his good stout loads, though.

If you run across one at a gun show, you won't know who did the work, he didn't mark them, either.
 
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Nice revolver. That pitting is one of the many reasons I just don't like Pach's

Wood grips can cause pitting also. I have a Model 60 Ladysmith that had wood stocks and under them and around the edges was pitting. Cleaned it all up and have hid what I could with a Hogue Grip. The biggest trick to all of this is to take the grips off when cleaning and clean under them too!
 
Here's a 1917 converted to a short barrel with underlug along with a 455 Mk II converted to a 45 Colt with underlug. Alan Harton didn't add any markings so the receipts will need to stay close at hand once I'm no longer the owner.

lloyd17-albums-customs-picture23368-dsc03317.jpg
 
The model 1950 45 barrels work well if you want a lighter barrel/ But they are not all that plentiful. The 1917 barrels will work to make fixed sight guns but finding a good loose barrel now days is kind of hard.

I have 8 S&W in 45 long colts and I hold onto the grips when I shoot them, then swing the cylinders out on its crane to reload them.

That is a proof load for a purists head:D
 
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Those types of conversions are not very difficult to do. The parts are available on eBay all the time and any gunsmith that is a decent S&W gunsmith should be able to do a good job. I was lucky enough to find a never installed brand new .44 spl 624 4” barrel on eBay and a 6.5” pristine Model 24. The first went to making my one of a kind 629-1 Mountaing gun using a 6” factory gun. We removed the original barrel and fitted the light profile 624 barrel to it and the GS had .44 Mag laser engraved on the new barrel after he removed the original factory markings. The second gun started life as a Model 27 and I had a blue Model 29 cylinder and the 24 barrel fitted. So it’s now a 6.5” light barrel contour .44 Mag. I left the .44 Special markings on the original barrel but it shoots both spl and mag. The guns were done by two separate very talented gunsmiths, and neither of them marked their work.
 
This was a popular conversion 30 - 50 years ago. Virtually any gunsmith would do it, individuals would do it. I think you are wasting time trying to find who did it. Everyone would have.
 
This was a popular conversion 30 - 50 years ago. Virtually any gunsmith would do it, individuals would do it. I think you are wasting time trying to find who did it. Everyone would have.
I try not to waste my time. Two year old threads would be a good example.
 
Reviving old threads is a good way to bring back old information and stimulate new discussion.

I have posted this many times but this is my custom Model 28-2, now a round butted 45 ACP.

IMG_7286.jpeg

It is shown with a 45 Hand Ejector Model 1950. I built the Model 28-2 because I wanted a 4” ACP revolver and very few were assembled. So, the Model 28-2 got a new cylinder, the barrel bored and rifled, a new frame lug, the grip frame rounded, action work, etc. It turned into a great shooter. Decades later the Mountain Gun was introduced but by then, I had given up wearing a badge.

Kevin
 
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