I can't think that there was any slide made in stainless that had the long 39 no-dash extractor. By the time the 539 and 639 came along, the short extractor designs were in use.
Exactly! Look at a 39's "PAT'S PENDING" and it'll be to the rear of the ejection port. That is one of the first things that caught my eyes on this slide because it's a primary test I use to gauge the COMPLETE authenticity of a model 39.
So then my eyes went rearward still farther and lo and behold, here's a long extractor! As does Bruce B agree, we know such does not belong on a shiny object - any shiny Smith & Wesson object. So, what's it doing on
this shiny object?
"Of that there is no doubt" it's stainless and I stay with the observation if nothing else but because I've worked with, been around stainless so much in my life it's not hard to spot.
First and foremost, there's the chromium that stainless must contain for it to be "stainless steel" at all. Chromium, the stuff from whence "chrome" - real chrome - comes, shines regardless of whether it is buffed. Yes, it's a tad duller. But ounce for ounce it outshines carbon steel with nary an effort - outside of a slide or inside that same slide. And this one slide is shining in places wholly inconvenient to buffing . . . or "Mothers" products.
It was said long extractor that caught my eye and provided the first real clue that here was something more to this device than initially met the eye. It was something a gunsmith lovingly guided with careful hands, fine tools and sharp eyes.
As nearly any "expert" will say with either a hint of condescension or a guffaw, "The problem with the old 39 was the extractor. They too easily broke."
Exquisitely machined, the 39's long extractor is one of the greatest designs within a great design: Serving as its own spring, when that extractor - easily twice the width of that which would replace it - bit into brass it didn't let loose of it util it was ready to be flung three feet away.
But break they did, though such breakage as often as not came at the heel of the extractor where it keyed into a slot just ahead of a corresponding safety tumbler and tensioned all around it, not just itself.
Under heavy and constant strain, this area was a hand-fitted point that required a level of repetitive patience and expertise that even the best of gunsmiths were hard pressed to meet given the demands of the assembly line.
Its replacement in the 39-2 would be a measly sized piece of metal secured by a pin and rocked by a coiled spring that would rarely break, if ever at all.
With it, Smith & Wesson not only solved a problem caused by a rushed assembly and the want of not screwing up an entire, more costly slide, but they were able to speed the assembly line as well.
There being no inherent fault found in the want of producing something more simply and at a greater pace . . . unless lamenting an ever-declining need for men who as much crafted what their hands would touch as assemble pre-fitted parts.
On the matter at hand, there is a true gunsmith who recognized the elegance in design of that original extractor and who wished to take the time in its replication, knowing that if properly crafted, that extractor is the better for the jobs it performs, hands down.
Ah, not only does a week of earnest work beckon, but so, too, the dawn.
Later.
DC