DESTROYED MY K38 TODAY/ update #139/ range report post #148

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I went to the range today and took my K38 manufactured in 1952 sn #K116731 must have had a hot round and destroyed the forcing cone and the yoke, the cylinder turns about hail way and sticks. I was shooting norma 158 gr fmj.
update replay #139
 

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Ouch...sorry to hear this. I will wait to see what the experts say...

I saw where someone had posted a cylinder and a barrel for 38. S&W. Your k38 frame might be the excellent candidate for those parts

Robert
 
I have previously seen several small cracks in barrel forcing cones, but nothing of that damage severity. It may be possible to replace the barrel provided the frame has not been deformed. I will repeat my earlier question. Was this a Norma factory load or a reload? Anything odd about the ammunition?
 
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The K on the butt indicates K38.

There is a lot I don’t know, the OP did not mention if he had hard extraction on the fired cases. All we know is his comment that it was a “hot round”. Hot rounds do crack forcing cones. I would be curious to know if the cylinder is ringed in anyway. The fact the OP says the cylinder turns half way and sticks could be due to the “destroyed yoke” or an expanded cylinder.

You would think that FMJ would not create over pressures in a 38 Special by itself. If the round was over pressure, the most probable cause was too much powder in the case.

A 1952 S&W was made of softer steels (probably a plain carbon steel), and the steels of the period had more residuals and crud in them than good steels made today. Old steels are weaker and more prone to failure. Not knowing the pressures of the kaboom round, we don’t know if a modern S&W would have survived this in any better condition.

It is most unfortunate that the OP’s K38 kaboomed. Not much he can do other than spend big bucks on a new yoke, barrel, and possibly cylinder, if he wants it to be functional. If the costs of that work exceed the cost of a new S&W 38 Special, I would not recommend doing it.

Someone will want the grips, the rear sight, the sideplate and internal parts. Maybe the cylinder if the cylinder is not bulged.
 
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I just like all-lead bullets in revolvers. Blasting jacketed rounds through two holes that may or may not aligned just seems like a lot to ask in a mass produced arm.

Wow.....Ya mean the millions of us that shoot jacketed bullet through our Smiths and Rugers for the last 75 years are wrong?
 
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