Originally posted by TEB:
That would be a model 42.
Originally posted by jframe:
Keep this thread towards the top; maybe someone at Smith & Wesson is reading and listening........
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!
Uh, they have had this already. It is called a 442. It has been available for years, and now there is a no-lock version available.
Originally posted by allglock:
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!
Uh, they have had this already. It is called a 442. It has been available for years, and now there is a no-lock version available.
Uh... a model 42 is NOT a 442..... Also look at my original post date. It was before any talk of NO LOCK Smiths being reintroduced...![]()
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!
Uh, they have had this already. It is called a 442. It has been available for years, and now there is a no-lock version available.
Uh... a model 42 is NOT a 442..... Also look at my original post date. It was before any talk of NO LOCK Smiths being reintroduced...![]()
I suppose you are right in the sense of name only, but in the sense of a 442 being a modern version of the 42, you are just plain wrong. As far as when "talk of no lock Smiths began," I would venture to say that there has been talk of that ever since the internal lock first appeared.
Thus, let us agree that a 442 is a modernized 42 using the new numbering system (the first 4 is for alloy).
Originally posted by allglock:
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
Originally posted by shawn mccarver:
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!
Uh, they have had this already. It is called a 442. It has been available for years, and now there is a no-lock version available.
Uh... a model 42 is NOT a 442..... Also look at my original post date. It was before any talk of NO LOCK Smiths being reintroduced...![]()
I suppose you are right in the sense of name only, but in the sense of a 442 being a modern version of the 42, you are just plain wrong. As far as when "talk of no lock Smiths began," I would venture to say that there has been talk of that ever since the internal lock first appeared.
Thus, let us agree that a 442 is a modernized 42 using the new numbering system (the first 4 is for alloy).
A model 42 is an airweight lemon squeezer... No real relation to a 442.
Originally posted by allglock:
They would sell like hotcakes!
No lock = increased sales!