hkcavalier
US Veteran
I've been a S&W guy for 10+ years and just got into Colts this year. There just aren't enough interesting S&Ws that turn up locally and most of the "niches" have been filled.
A few thoughts:
If you only focus on the Seven Serpents, you will probably have a tough time. Those are what everyone is going for right now. I chose to focus on pre-WWII double-action guns because of this. There are lots of gems there.
They are tougher to work on as an amateur. The timing in older Colts is not for the faint of heart.
Original grips will be tougher to find. Colt changed their grip frame dimensions far more than S&W. I can fit K frame round butt grips pulled from a S&W made yesterday to my 102 year old M&P revolver. I cannot do that with many Colts.
Unlike S&W, Colt still makes collectible guns. Their dumping of the MARSOC .45s on the market a while back is a good example. I would argue a significant number of new Colt SAAs are purchased and then stored away, NIB and unfired outside the factory. If you want a nice shooter SAA you can buy replicas from the beautiful Standards down to the Italian ones (which are still pretty nice for the most part).
I'm pretty much focused on revolvers, but of course there are tons of collectible Colt autos and rifles too. Most of the guys I have run into on the Colt forum tend to stick to one category; it's tough to become an expert on them all.
A few thoughts:
If you only focus on the Seven Serpents, you will probably have a tough time. Those are what everyone is going for right now. I chose to focus on pre-WWII double-action guns because of this. There are lots of gems there.
They are tougher to work on as an amateur. The timing in older Colts is not for the faint of heart.
Original grips will be tougher to find. Colt changed their grip frame dimensions far more than S&W. I can fit K frame round butt grips pulled from a S&W made yesterday to my 102 year old M&P revolver. I cannot do that with many Colts.
Unlike S&W, Colt still makes collectible guns. Their dumping of the MARSOC .45s on the market a while back is a good example. I would argue a significant number of new Colt SAAs are purchased and then stored away, NIB and unfired outside the factory. If you want a nice shooter SAA you can buy replicas from the beautiful Standards down to the Italian ones (which are still pretty nice for the most part).
I'm pretty much focused on revolvers, but of course there are tons of collectible Colt autos and rifles too. Most of the guys I have run into on the Colt forum tend to stick to one category; it's tough to become an expert on them all.