Kavinsky
Member
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2011
- Messages
- 672
- Reaction score
- 33
Yeah I just got my hands on a vintage K38 from 1952 about 3 or 4 months ago thanks to a smith and wesson book I bought
and its only just now that I've finally built up the nerve to clean the thing after shooting it twice, as it was actually unfired and completely new save for one little mark, and I gotta ask is it normal to find like a rubber drum with a chalknumber on it in the grips that act as an insert to help it seal up with the frame
which was metal on the K22
as this according to the book must have been one of the first to come with the combat grips, which first came out in 1951, as it doesnt even have the medallions they typically have fitted to it
like its smooth trigger, combat grips, the kind you'd see on a model 19 without the medallions and what I presume is the normal hammer, with the old style front sight
and the chalkmarks are on the drum on either side of the grips
which I have never seen before, like I didnt accidentally pick up like a prototype with the first set of combat grips on it did I?
and its only just now that I've finally built up the nerve to clean the thing after shooting it twice, as it was actually unfired and completely new save for one little mark, and I gotta ask is it normal to find like a rubber drum with a chalknumber on it in the grips that act as an insert to help it seal up with the frame
which was metal on the K22
as this according to the book must have been one of the first to come with the combat grips, which first came out in 1951, as it doesnt even have the medallions they typically have fitted to it
like its smooth trigger, combat grips, the kind you'd see on a model 19 without the medallions and what I presume is the normal hammer, with the old style front sight
and the chalkmarks are on the drum on either side of the grips
which I have never seen before, like I didnt accidentally pick up like a prototype with the first set of combat grips on it did I?