Triggernosis
Member
Wouldn't that be neat? I think Pinnacle Guns can do a conversion to 9mm. Might be worth the cost just in ammo savings alone.
Yes Ruger made 500 for the LAPD but they were sold off my friend has one i believe it a seven shot in stainless.Very nice gun.
roaddog said:Ruger made a run of Security Sixes in 9 mm back I believe in the seventies. Actually they are rare and comand a good price.
I've gotten curious enough to beg for a Ruger expert to straighten out the information in this thread or for a verifiable source. The reason is, I'd love to have a 9mm revolver that is competitive against moon clip loading model 686s, 627s & 625s in matches, and I'd pay a "good price" to get one. Security Sixes were affordable utility guns that lacked the class of S&Ws, but my experience with one has been quite positive. It is my understanding that Ruger only made Service Sixes and Speed Sixes in 9mm, not Security Sixes. I see the 9mm Speed Sixes around, but not the Service Sixes, so were more of the snub noses made?
Getting back to S&Ws, David Sinko writes "S&W is notorious for putting .357" barrels on some of their Supers (like the expensive first run PC eight shooters)." Do the current, or 2nd run of 627 .38 Supers have smaller groove diameters and what about the L frame .38 Supers?
Thanks in advance for any additional information.
Gil
Don't give up so quick. It's possible to dramatically improve the double action trigger pull on a Smith revo without any permanent modifications to original parts.Why not a trigger job? Most purists want a undisturbed piece.
![]()
David Sinko said:A six shot 9mm revolver really has no place in the gun games...
I don't doubt you are correct for highly populated areas that can turn out large enough numbers of shooters to split them between disciplines and turn away would be participants who show up with equipment that does not meet nit-picky rules. In my small city the only match that is run "correctly" by somebody else's official rules is a monthly IPSC match that draws shooters from out of the area. Nearly all the other matches except for cowboy have these rules in common: maximum 6 ctg. in any gun, .380 ACP minimum, and steel targets must fall down for a decent score. 9mm reliably knocks down all the steel at our club and all the clubs within 2 hour's drive. The six round rule is popular so revolvers do not have to be scored separately. A weekly series just started that is limited to open sights primarily so that new shooter don't arrive, take one look at gamers' exotic guns, turn around and leave. I love open sights only!
I can shoot in my back yard for free. If I get motivated to spend over 3 hours on the highway and pay the fees for a correctly run match, bullseye gets 1st priority. I wish there was enough interest to run a bullseye series by the rules, but bullseye is set up so you can spend a lifetime trying to improve your score, and most shooters want high scores to take less effort. For a revolver enthusiast at most of the matches run locally, a 9mm with moon clips would be the most economical to feed when I don't have time for reloading.
Best regards;
Gil