DWalt
Member
Many, if not most, here know that the rivalry between Colt and S&W manifested itself in neither manufacturer connecting the other's name in any way to their own products. This extended to ammunition. For example, the .32 and .38 Colt New Police cartridges were essentially the same as the .32 S&W L and .38 S&W cartridges, except for the name and the flat bullet nose.
While cleaning and reorganizing my messy garage, I found amongst a quantity of old ammunition a nearly full box of Winchester .38 Colt Special ammunition. Many have heard of it but may never have seen any. The only visible difference from the .38 S&W Special is that the Colt round has a flat nosed lead bullet, and the headstamp is 38 Special instead of .38 S&W Special. Colt's revolver barrel stamp was also simply "38 Special" instead of ".38 S&W Special Ctg" as used by S&W. This Winchester type 2 box is from sometime in the 1932-35 period, and the ammunition probably remains sure fire. About 10 years ago I sacrificed six rounds of it to see if it still fired OK, and of course it did. Note that the box label shows the headstamp as 38 Colt Spl, but that HS was not used on the cartridge itself. The .38 Colt Special cartridge was loaded until around 1950, last appearing in the Remington 1950 ammunition catalog.
While cleaning and reorganizing my messy garage, I found amongst a quantity of old ammunition a nearly full box of Winchester .38 Colt Special ammunition. Many have heard of it but may never have seen any. The only visible difference from the .38 S&W Special is that the Colt round has a flat nosed lead bullet, and the headstamp is 38 Special instead of .38 S&W Special. Colt's revolver barrel stamp was also simply "38 Special" instead of ".38 S&W Special Ctg" as used by S&W. This Winchester type 2 box is from sometime in the 1932-35 period, and the ammunition probably remains sure fire. About 10 years ago I sacrificed six rounds of it to see if it still fired OK, and of course it did. Note that the box label shows the headstamp as 38 Colt Spl, but that HS was not used on the cartridge itself. The .38 Colt Special cartridge was loaded until around 1950, last appearing in the Remington 1950 ammunition catalog.


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