I'd just like.....
I'd just like it to be a shooter than just an antique heirloom gun. That's an antique heirloom gun that shoots. I wouldn't want to shoot it a lot and with soft loads at that. I shot it 30+ years ago and it's just a novelty being a .38 S&W. Kinda goes Bang! instead of BANG!
That's really lousy about a first class gun going out of time so easily. I especially didn't know that Pythons do the same thing. Well, I'm glad I didn't like them enough to buy one. Now Smiths are GREAT mechanically, but they have a hard time screwing barrels on straight. Colt is the superior performer in that aspect.
I will keep the Colt it as it was handed down but it bugs me having a gun that you can't use. I've got a very old double barrel 12 ga that will let both barrels off if you pull one trigger. And the barrel is swelled up so it would probably explode.
Bear in mind that pre-MK III Colts go out of time much sooner than do Ruger and S&W revolvers.
MOST of the older Colts that I've handled were out of time, and it costs a lot to repair them. A famous gunsmith said that he'd repair a friend's Python, but warned that it might go out of time again with less than 1,000 more rounds through it.
I haven't noticed this so much in Colt SA guns, but haven't handled many and have shot just one. Ruger SA's, of course, hold up VERY well, as do their DA guns. I think you can shoot a Ruger SA with reasonable loads and it'd probably need a gunsmith at some time before the Sun burns out, but it'll take awhile...
I'd just like it to be a shooter than just an antique heirloom gun. That's an antique heirloom gun that shoots. I wouldn't want to shoot it a lot and with soft loads at that. I shot it 30+ years ago and it's just a novelty being a .38 S&W. Kinda goes Bang! instead of BANG!
That's really lousy about a first class gun going out of time so easily. I especially didn't know that Pythons do the same thing. Well, I'm glad I didn't like them enough to buy one. Now Smiths are GREAT mechanically, but they have a hard time screwing barrels on straight. Colt is the superior performer in that aspect.

I will keep the Colt it as it was handed down but it bugs me having a gun that you can't use. I've got a very old double barrel 12 ga that will let both barrels off if you pull one trigger. And the barrel is swelled up so it would probably explode.

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