Any pics of the most worn of your six guns?

Like This:

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I took some Mothers to it and look what it turned into:
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Model 10-5. Terrible outward appearance-Looks up tight as new and shoots like a laser with .38 wadcutters. I keep thinking I am going to have it chrome plated by AWP. Got when snub nose model 10's were still bargain priced. Its got a few scars but I just like it.
 
Thankfully this gun shoots better than it looks, this is the good side, most of the left barrel is very pitted on the outside but it makes it a great sleeper.

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Here's my Model 27-2. Most of the bluing is worn off the one side by the grip. Not the prettiest in the bunch but it shoots like a dream at 25yrds.
 

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More than 150 years old Remington 1858 (not one of the common modern knockoffs), and still take it out to shoot every month or two.
 

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Smooth action

My Grandfather carried this .38 special (6" barrel) often while hunting, and he passed it on to my Dad. My Dad carried when hunting. By the time I inherited it, it was covered in a brown patina. I don't know that I would restore it even if I had the money to have Doug Turnbull do the work. The action is smoother than any other revolver I own.

I was a firearm's instructor for the Sheriff's Department that I worked for. I worked there from 1983 to 1999. The last ten of those years I instructed firearms' proficiency, pursuit driving and empty handed control of violent subjects.

I friend of mine had a more than passing fancy in the category of handgun assembly and disassembly. He knew how to safely stone a revolver down to 3 lb. Due to his added steps, each one improving the "feel" of the trigger, he could make you swear your trigger was too dangerous to shoot; IOW, it was too light, but, each trigger broke the sear at 3 lb.

He married a woman that he taught in the academy. He started working on her 686 when the academy started. He finished in time for her to use the 4" barreled S&W 686 to qualify in the firearms' proficiency portion of the academy.

Long story short, she ditched his rear and he sold me the 686. The Lord only knows how many man-hours he had sunk into that revolver, but he sold it to me for a used (98% Blue Book) price, which was a steal! I still marvel over how smooth that entire action operates. He polished every internal surface he could polish without compromising the function of the revolver. All moving parts were polished as well as the internal walls of the action. He was big-time in love with that woman.

The old .38 Spcl that was originally my Grandfather's, then my Dad's, and now mine, has an action as smooth as that 686. My Grandfather shot his guns; he had no safe-queens. My Dad kind of fell in the middle. He had some that he would throw himself in the ground under the weapon so it would land on him, not the ground. I have his favorite revolver which I've described in another thread. I guess tens of thousands of round would begin to break a revolver action in...
 
Love the grey guns.

Good story Ralph.

I plan to shoot the blue off this old 36.
 
Ruger Standard Pistol (9-shooter) $37.50 in 1964. Thousands of rounds, maybe half a dozen cleanings since. Grips are Dremeled Tigerwood, even more oily than Rosewood. Still reliable, still shoots point of aim. Not much left of original blueing.

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LOL! OK - THIS one beats the Model 10 police turn in I just bought. IT looks like it wore out a cpl holsters, AND was hard chromed in a couple places...
 
Here's two of my favorites:
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This is my dad's 66-1, purchased by him new in the early 80s as an off-duty gun. Modifications performed included Milletts and Pachmayr Compac grips. It has an action job, and the original hammer and trigger were swapped out for a bobbed hammer and smooth trigger. It looks just like it did in 1982. It was given to me upon my graduation from the NJ State Police Academy in 1997, so it could be used as my off-duty gun. I just traded it back to him for his 2-1/2" 686 no dash. It is now carried daily by its original owner.
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My dad's 28-2 purchased by him shortly after he was hired by the Willingboro PD in October of 1970. Originally a 4" gun, it was swapped out for a 6 inch tube after he began to shoot a lot of PPC matches. The barrel swap was performed by S&W, as was the engraving of his name on the right side plate. The original sight and grips were shelved in favor of a Behlert rear sight and Pachmayr Presentation grip. It was carried as a duty gun from the early 1970s until the mid 1980s. It remains in its as-carried state.
 
New Century...

how about an old .44?

Kritter, I guess it's up to you and me to 'raise the conciousness' of this thread... :)

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This New Century rode the river in West Texas and served on both sides of the law during the early post WW1 era.

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At least one of it's previous owners met a sudden and bloody end.

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Drew
 
Kritter, I guess it's up to you and me to 'raise the conciousness' of this thread... :)

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This New Century rode the river in West Texas and served on both sides of the law during the early post WW1 era.

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At least one of it's previous owners met a sudden and bloody end.

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Drew

Now that's "good wear".
 
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