I'm surprised nobody has mentioned this... part of the reason the 5-inch Model 27 and pre-Model 27 were/are so popular is because old farts like me grew up reading Skeeter Skelton. The 5-inch N-Frame 357 Magnum was Skeeter's favorite double action 357. He mostly shot it with the Thompson designed 158 grain gas checked lead SWC that had two crimp grooves. One crimp groove was for use with 357 Magnum brass, and the other was so the bullet could be seated out in 38 Special brass with a 357 Magnum level charge of 2400 powder (to be used ONLY in 357 Magnum revolvers). He used the 38 Special brass because it was easy to come by and, for many years after WWII, 357 Magnum brass was hard to come by. I mostly prefer big bore revolvers (41 caliber and up), but I have a beautiful post-WWII/pre-Model 27 with a 5-inch barrel that I covet dearly. A person would pay hell trying to pry it from my hands. I would like to have a 3.5 inch version to add to my collection just because they look so mean, but the five inch gun is a far better compromise for a field gun, especially for the vertically challenged, such as myself (I'm only 5'6" tall). I always thought the 8 3/8 inch S&Ws were silly because they are so hard to carry. I prefer 6.5 inch S&Ws to the 6 inch N-Frame guns because they look better proportioned to me, but they are getting a bit long for me to carry.
Whelenshooter