Excellent find! Although I prefer the size and feel of the 1076, the 1026 seems to come up less often, especially since S&W made less than 2,000 of them. Since I already have a 1006, 1066 and 1076, I might be real interested myself, if I came across a really nice one. Again, you done real good.![]()
when decocking the frame-mounted versions, the hammer falls only to a half-cock notch (the hammer actually sticks out from the back of the slide when decocked), so the double-action trigger pull is shorter and lighter than on those models with slide-mounted decockers.
That number rang a bell for me so I check the factory letter on my 1006 which gives numbers for all 10mm. Here they are:. . . the number I've seen most often for the 1026 is 3135.
I always have a senior moment when getting the numbers correct from memory for the 10mm pistols, except the 1006 and 1066.Model 1006 26978 units
Model 1026 3135 units
Model 1046 151 units
Model 1066 5067 units
Model 1076 13805 units
Model 1086 1660
XTrooper wrote:That number rang a bell for me so I check the factory letter on my 1006 which gives numbers for all 10mm. Here they are:I always have a senior moment when getting the numbers correct from memory for the 10mm pistols, except the 1006 and 1066.I can remember those . . . oh, and the number of 4576 pistols made, 1389 units.
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So that was you that outbidded me on GunBroker.![]()
In this photo of my KSP Model 1076, you can see the serrated top of its hammer sticking out from the rear of the slide. This is the normal "decocked" position of the hammer on the 1076 and 1026. In fact, the only way you can get the hammers on these models to stay fully forward (as seen in the photos of the 1026 above) is to pull the trigger on an empty chamber (dry fire the pistol).