K38 Masterpiece info

If the stocks on your gun are pristine (they look great to me but cant tell if checkering is sharp from pics) alone they are worth $150-200 .
A shooter grade K38 6" depending on mechanical condition and cosmetics maybe $500-600 for gun alone.

Many would buy it just for the stocks.
 
Very nice revolver
Only thing I'd add is that there were two 6" versions available in 1952 the earlier narrow rib version aka the 6" K38 Masterpiece and the weight matched wide rib version (like yours) aka the 6" K38 "Heavy" Masterpiece.
Any idea what year the narrow rib K38 started losing popularity? I ask because I assume there were a lot more 5 screw heavy K38s made than the 5 screw narrow rib k38s. I haven't seen that many 5 screw narrow ribs around. Thanks.
 
Any idea what year the narrow rib K38 started losing popularity? I ask because I assume there were a lot more 5 screw heavy K38s made than the 5 screw narrow rib k38s. I haven't seen that many 5 screw narrow ribs around. Thanks.
I don't believe it was due to loosing popularity.
IIRC it was to keep the weight the same for bullseye shooters.
Where a k22 and k38 would weigh the same.
 
I don't believe it was due to loosing popularity.
IIRC it was to keep the weight the same for bullseye shooters.
Where a k22 and k38 would weigh the same.
Thanks Weatherby, do you agree it was phasing out in 1949?
 
It was not "phased out" in 1949. It is possible that demand was waning a bit by 1950, but S&W produced both models until at least late 1952 or 1953. A bunch of the 6" tapered barrels were used up, cut to 5", for the special order from the Missouri State Highway Patrol for 5" Combat Masterpiece revolvers. Approximately 367 of those were built in 1952 and 1953, with 365 of them shipped to the MSHP in four shipments ending on October 13, 1953. The 6" tapered barrel model disappeared from the scene in about 1953.
 
Manufacturing was stopped in 1949 with the introduction of the heavy barrel. The problem with a S&W letter is, they tell you when a particular gun was shipped, not manufactured. In the case of the narrow rib Masterpiece, I have no doubt they were still shipping them well into the 50's.
 
The post-war K38 Masterpiece was introduced in 1947, and the narrow rib was phased out when the heavy barrel was introduced in 1949.

You have to remember that although the 6" wide rib K38 did supplement at first and then supplant the 6" narrow rib K38 the narrow rib continued in production in the 4" Combat Masterpiece with 2" less barrel (except the snub 15's which had the wide rib barrel) and a Baughman fs blade on long ramp up until the dash 5 revision when the narrow rib went away replaced by two different wide rib versions.

Where it gets weird is the 14-5 got a full underlug barrel in 4", 6" and 8 3/8" and the 15-5 got the old Heavy Masterpiece wide rib barrel with no ejector rod shroud in 4", 6" and 8 3/8" lengths.

Below examples 4" Model 15-5 (L) and 6" Model 14-6 (R)
 

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That's fine for the 4" Combat Masterpiece, but the 6" barrel as used on the K38 Masterpiece switched over to the wide rib in 1949 as stated in the Smith & Wesson 5th Edition Catalog.
 
the 6" barrel as used on the K38 Masterpiece switched over to the wide rib in 1949 as stated in the Smith & Wesson 5th Edition Catalog.
It simply does not say that. It says, "1949: Manufactured a heavy barrel to match the K17 and K32 in weight." That simply means the heavy version was introduced that year. It does not mean the narrow rib, tapered barrel version was replaced by the Heavy Masterpiece in 1949. It wasn't.
 
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