I changed it thanksFYI: Nickel plated, not stainless steel.
I haven't even cleaned it yet, thank youI've seen asking prices as high as $900 for Nickle m-19s in excellent condition. I don't know if they sell that high or not but its very hard to find 40-60 year old pinned barrel nickel Smiths that still look great!
Well, this one shipped in 1977, and it is flawless. I bought it at a gun show in 2011.... its (sic) very hard to find 40-60 year old pinned barrel nickel Smiths that still look great!
*Thinking ins. value would be around $800-900... goodyears probably hurt it it bit. I'd keep.a shsrp eye pealed for original stocks. NICE FIND! (
Yeah. Cops I worked with almost always changed out their wood Magna grips for rubber Pachmayr. There is no other grip that I shoot as well with as the Pachmayr Gripper Professional with the open backstrap.*
Take the grips off and clean under them; rubber can trap condensation. Grips are very individual based on hand size and the like. I came up in firearms when the default response was to remove wood grips and pitch them, then replace with rubber. Most of the time, for most uses, rubber grips are exponentially more practical, but that is not always true. I find most factory wood grips to be underwhelming, but as I note, that can be very individual.
Or blued.Watch how you clean that nickle gun! I seem to recall ammonia based products are not good for nickle finishes.