TomkinsSP
Member
Yes, it was a joke. Folks, do not scour your gun with baking soda or put vinegar on it.
Oh, and keep the long skinny end pointed AWAY from you.

Yes, it was a joke. Folks, do not scour your gun with baking soda or put vinegar on it.
Perhaps the photos do not show it well enough, but this is not a museum piece. It is not rare, there were over 30,000 of these made. The original blue is only about 75%, and it has its share of small nicks and scratches. Beyond that, I am proficient at taking one of these apart and putting it back together again without harming anything. Shooting it with Black Powder loads which are actually slightly less powerful than the original loads (200 grain bullets instead of 230 grains) will not hurt it at all. I'm not going to be shooting it every week, just a few times a year. Beyond that..........let's see, it's my gun right?
like it or not every time you shoot/disassemble a 100+ yr old firearm in that condition you degrade it.
Hi Chip,Yes, it was part of a large shipment to Japan, and yes, it shipped with the butt swivel in place. I asked about the mark near the butt swivel, and included a photo, but there was no mention of that.
Sal,Very curious about serial number to shipping dates.
It is researched written and accepted that the Japanese Contract guns were numbered within the standard numbering system for the New Model 3s. As we've studied, Japanese guns did not have their own serial number range like the Frontiers, or .32 &.38-44 Target series, etc
Perhaps some Japanese NM3s were shipped in a separate SN range ?
Another S&W enigma that requires further research.
Sal,
It's been well known...For some time now...Most all of the Japanese Shipped NM#3s were pulled from Pre-Existing Inventory as part of a clean-up of those Revolvers that hadn't been selling well at the time lying stagnant on Inventory Shelves!!
Meaning there is no rhyme or reason as to any given Serial No. Range they may fall into given they were pulled at random from the vault...Some being pulled in order (Some Not)...That explains the reason for Shipping Dates for these Revolvers being spread across such a broad range in no specific order!! Hope this helps!!
Sal,8 years later, a lower SN ships is something that certainly sparks my curiosity.
Other NM3 Targets shipped to USA and England seem to that follow a more consistent serial number / date sequence with one or two 1 year off, but 8 years I find curious.
Then again most of the SNs I have to compare are Target .44s.
Other NM3 Targets shipped to USA and England seem to that follow a more consistent serial number / date sequence with one or two odd shipments that are a 1 year off, but 8 years I find curious.
Jim,
I thought I got my interest stated properly but you're missing it.
Sal, I was trying to offer a possible answer for your first statement above regarding an 8 year gap.
The only other thought that I can offer is that sometimes guns were handed out to magazine writers or other such persons and didn't find their way back into inventory for extended periods. That's all I got.![]()