bigpappa160
Member
I'm trying to find out some info on a SW 6906! Is it a DA/SA or a daily. There's this guy near me has one for sale but can't get much info from him. I look on you tube but it only shows videos of the 5906? Any help on this
6906.. = .... chopped 5906
I need one of these in my life!!!! do they take the model 59/5906 mags? (I have a **** ton of those from my father in law's model 59 that he had to give up when CA boned everyone with the mag limitation this last year)
The 6906 is a compact version of the 5906.
It's a 12+1 round, bobbed hammer, DA semi-auto pistol. First shot is DA, subsequent shots are SA.
Weight is 30.5 oz loaded, and it'll fit many Glock 19 holsters just fine.
12 round magazines are scarce and tend to be expensive when you find them (upwards of $60). However, 10 round magazines are readily available and MecGar still makes them.
The DA and SA trigger pulls are good and the trigger reach is short enough that it works well for folks with shorter fingers.
It uses Novak low profile 3 dot sights. The 6906 were sold with both standard 3 dot sights and 3 dot tritium sights. Meprolite sells replacements for the tritium sights.
I got this one at a gun show from a shop that bought a number of them as police trade-ins, along with a number of 5906 pistol. He was selling them for $200 each, with 1 magazine included. I got lucky and scored 2 more 12 round magazines from another vendor for $20 each.
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I believe the 5906 had a stainless frame and slide whereas a 6906 was an alloy frame and stainless slide. That is a pretty major difference in weight and also difference in size.
Bam-Bam, you said (along with other blaspheme) - "The 3913/14 as the descendants of the ASP, Devel and Trapper 'chopped and channeled', 'hot rodded', customized; 39-2s of the 1980s.......which inspired the whole 3rd Gen of guns."
"What gun did Novak first work on with S&W?"
Bam Bam, as a peripheral part to a future SWCA magazine article your humble author has been working on for the last couple of months (writing is easy; research is the time-consuming part), West Virginian Wayne Novak's first serious Smith & Wesson contribution - beyond better fore-and-aft sights for Smith & Wesson guns - ultimately culminated in two highly recognizable compact pistols known to hardcore S&W types everywhere: Smith & Wesson Model 469, its first compact double-stack 9mm, and the Model 4516, which likewise was that company's first compact .45 ACP.
More so, Novak contributed more than the two compacts, according to former Guns & Ammo feature editor and writer Wiley Clapp, who was smack-dab in the thick of things when undertaken was S&W's multi-year transition to its third-generation semi-autos - from prototypes to retailer store-shelf stocking.
Besides Novak notably having "teamed up with S&W's Tom Campbell in developing the (Model) 745 (.45 ACP) for IPSC shooters," when its third generation of semi-automatics was introduced Smith & Wesson "credited the majority of the ergonomic improvements on the guns" to Novak, according to Clapp's 1989 retrospective in Guns & Ammo.
There's more - a lot more, in fact - as I'll soon be publishing the above and shortly thereafter will either wither under a rain of arrows crashing around me or triumphantly ride a chariot captained by Vestal Virgins as the throngs throw rose petals so that my sandals might never touch the ground.
Uh-huh, and I'm Johnny Cash.
It's a decocker/safety.Thank You! That was some detailed information and I like that and not to take away from all the info I got from other people which was good info also. 1 more question, Is that just a thumb safety or is it a decocker/safety?
LOL...... dragged me in from another thread... then accuse me of blaspheme!! Not sure how to take that from a old dead guy!!!!!
Had a 469 and it's grip was a 2X4 and the front sight ......... well you know! I was so happy when the 3913 and 6906 were introduced!!!![]()