RidgwayCO
Member
I was talking to my brother-in-law's girlfriend over Thanksgiving dinner, and she confided that she had found the handgun she wanted. When she stated "A dealer back home has a S&W model 638 in .38 Special that I really like!" I congratulated her on an excellent choice, then casually asked if she'd ever shot one. She said "Not yet! I was hoping you might have one I can try out before I buy." We set up a shooting date for today.
To make a long story short(er), the M638 with standard (not +P) .38 Special ammo had way too much recoil for her. She shot a cylinder-full, and then handed the revolver back to me, saying "That's too much for me. I can't imagine taking that to the range to practice." Just so she didn't get discouraged, I let her shoot her fill with my M617-4 10-shot (which she loved). Surprisingly, she also liked my "M691" (custom M681 in .44 Special) and shot it very well. Per her instructions, I'm to keep an eye out for a M64 or M65 with a 3" or 4" barrel, for her to use with .38 Special.
I guess the reason for this post is to confirm (yet again) that the extremely lightweight revolvers are really guns for "experts", and are not usually appropriate for beginners.
To make a long story short(er), the M638 with standard (not +P) .38 Special ammo had way too much recoil for her. She shot a cylinder-full, and then handed the revolver back to me, saying "That's too much for me. I can't imagine taking that to the range to practice." Just so she didn't get discouraged, I let her shoot her fill with my M617-4 10-shot (which she loved). Surprisingly, she also liked my "M691" (custom M681 in .44 Special) and shot it very well. Per her instructions, I'm to keep an eye out for a M64 or M65 with a 3" or 4" barrel, for her to use with .38 Special.
I guess the reason for this post is to confirm (yet again) that the extremely lightweight revolvers are really guns for "experts", and are not usually appropriate for beginners.