New guns from S&W

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The .380 will probably be popular, if you could find the ammo for it.
The 38 is .... just, well.... I thought the LCR was ugly when it came out last year.


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Later we were shown the first iterations of a gun to be out in May or so from Smith and Wesson. One was the Bodyguard 38 and the other was the Bodyguard 380. The 38, as one might expect, was a five shot revolver in .38 Special.

This is not grand dad's j-frame. This is a new gun, the biggest leap in S&W's DA revolver history. Taking a look at it, it appears to be a revolver with a couple of protuberances. Simply, it's a sub-two-inch .38 Special, rated for +P ammo. It's a hammer-fired double action only revolver. It weighs around 14 ounces, is around 1.4" thick, has a stainless steel barrel liner and a stainless steel cylinder - the latter is dark PVD coated.

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The frame is a one-piece aluminum alloy upper with a steel-reinforced polymer lower frame.

The new gun has a one-piece rubber stock, a notch in the top-strap rear sight and a pinned black front blade.

Still not excited? Well there's not a single part of the new gun currently in use in any S&W handgun. The cylinder latch thumb-piece is no longer where it was. It's atop the frame accessible to either hand - an ambidextrous cylinder release.

An Insight Technologies laser is a part of the gun. With a top mounted switch, the laser has a constant beam, a pulse laser. The third press of the switch turns it off. With constant beam, the laser, powered by 2 Energizer 357 batteries, has a run time of 3 hours.

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The S&W Bodyguard 380 is a compact double action only 6-shot .380 Auto. Measured at ¾" thick, the little gun is hammer fired, has a second-strike capability and an Insight laser aimer installed inside the dustcover.

We fired both these guns at American Shooters indoor range. The Bodyguard 38 has a smooth trigger, correctly noted as "better than a typical J" by a tenured S&W representative. Using first the laser then the standard sights, I was able to keep representative 125 grain JHP ammo by Hornady as well as remanufactured ammo in tight groups -- bullet holes touching at around 7 yards without any difficulty. I noticed that, while loud, the gun didn't seem to particularly "kick hard." Figuring the top-mounted latch to be a boondoggle - you have to compromise your grip to get at it, I reasoned - I found it easily reached and ideally located. It's well thought out. This gun has lots of promise.

The Bodyguard 380 was quite thin - very flat. The safety - it has a manual safety - is small, cannot be knocked "on" by accident. In fact, I never did get the safety on. The trigger is quite smooth and I found accuracy on par with the Bodyguard 38.
 
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Thanks for the information. S&W had a formal announcement this morning when the SHOT Show opened in Las Vegas.

My buddy is at the show and is calling me at lunch time for an update on all of the new items.

These CCW firearms are still hot at consumer level. My friend owns these shops in Florida and the 38's are his best sellers.
 
Looks to me like S&W is trying to follow in the footsteps of Ruger, Kel Tec, and Kahr. Ho Hum.
 
Taurus apparently has made a plastic (ala LCR) "Judge" revolver, a "Raging" series judge that will handle the .455, and a revolving rifle called the "Circut Judge".
 
Cell phone pics...
 

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Somebody please explain to me how that fugly plastic POS is an improvement over the current Centennial series of revolvers. And don't cite the 1oz weight savings, I can save that by leaving my pocket change at home.


I do kinda like the .380, are there anymore pics of that one around? What's it weigh?

We won't even discuss the plastic Judge.
 
Somebody please explain to me how that fugly plastic POS is an improvement over the current Centennial series of revolvers. And don't cite the 1oz weight savings, I can save that by leaving my pocket change at home.


I do kinda like the .380, are there anymore pics of that one around? What's it weigh?

We won't even discuss the plastic Judge.

I guess if you are going to get a J frame in 38+P and want a laser, it fills the need. If the price is MUCH less than a CT-J frame combo maybe it will go. Some people don't like/care the way guns look. People spend big money on those funky box cars every day.

The 380 with a laser has got my attention. I wish I knew how much.
 
I guess if you are going to get a J frame in 38+P and want a laser, it fills the need. If the price is MUCH less than a CT-J frame combo maybe it will go. Some people don't like/care the way guns look. People spend big money on those funky box cars every day.

The 380 with a laser has got my attention. I wish I knew how much.

My $165 CT LG-105's work just fine and don't make my gun look anything like that abomination.

I agree, the .380 has piqued my interest as well. Too bad they didn't elaborate on that one instead of wasting space on the polymer experiment.
 
I bleeve I'll stick with my old 50s-60s-70s j-frames. Does the new one have a pinned barrel? Will a Tyler T-Grip work with it?;)
 
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redlevel,

The new MIM Tyler T will work with it, just fine...


giz
 
I pretty much know zero about metallurgy or plasticllurgy. I would think that a suitable polymer frame with a metal breachplate secured properly would stand up to heavy loads in the long run as the polymer would "flex and restore" to original shape as opposed to a solid alloy frame that would flex and loose shape or crack. I don't know how to intelligently explain my thoughts. I like the traditional looking cyl. on the Smith plastic gun as opposed to the Ruger. The integrated laser is gonna raise the cost a bunch.
 
I didn't think you could make a Taurus Judge uglier. I missed that one by a mile. I'm just no fan of these plastic revolvers. Although I'm sure the same was said of plastic auto's. Look where that went. I agree about the .380, that I would like to see more of without the laser attachment. Of course I'm sure it will be like everything else, you won't be able to get them. The LCP has been available for two years and I've yet as a wholesale dealer been able to get them "wholesale".
 

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