Shrek Of The Arctic
Member
- Joined
- May 22, 2019
- Messages
- 332
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As much as I would love to take comfort in a hard core opinion one way or the other, I generally see the matter in a fairly nuanced perception. In short, the new revolvers ain't as bad as you'll often hear, and the old revolvers ain't as great. I think that often times scarcity somehow gets confused with quality. Back when I was a young 'un in the mid eighties, I remember being in the gun shops and hearing a lot of grown ups debate which was better: The S&W 686 or the Colt Python. For a time before the internet, when knowledge was mainly disbursed through books and magazines without the help of the internet and a bajillion gun tubers, they had pretty objective and reasonable discussions. They compared actions, lock up, finishes, accuracy, etc. Then when they quit making the Colt Python, it became this untouchable holy grail that would never be seen again, or matched in future production, even as we enter the age of flying cars and robots.
I do like the feel of the older S&W revolvers more. They just have a smoother, more solid action. As an unqualified kitchen table goon smith, I have little trouble getting the older actions down to 8 or 9 lbs. DA. It ain't complex. I keep a service strength hammer spring, 12 lb trigger return spring, and do a bit of polishing here and there. With the newer revolvers, I can't ever, ever get them out of the double digits. I also dislike that any time I buy a newer S&W I basically have to set money aside for a spring kit, an extended firing pin, and a decent set of stocks.
I think that we get so hung up in nostalgia that we forget how nice modern stuff can be. the scandium models, the .357 J frames that came along, the 8 shot cylinders, 9mm revolver, the 1913 light rails, red dot ready revolvers are really nice to have, and I feel that we take them for granted. the MIM that everyone gnashes their teeth in woe and misery about is a huge step up from the electro hardening process that made any polishing or customization a sketchy proposition.
I've got a 1917, a Victory, a Model 10, 64, 586, 625, and the TRR8. They're all happy occupying space on the same table. I seem to shoot my 1917 with a peculiar accuracy that is surprising for an old war horse. It still puts big holes reliably where I tell it to. When something goes bump in the night, I take alot of comfort in eight shots and an attached flashlight with my 327.
I've only had to use the modern warranty once. It was a tedious process, but well honored by them.
I do like the feel of the older S&W revolvers more. They just have a smoother, more solid action. As an unqualified kitchen table goon smith, I have little trouble getting the older actions down to 8 or 9 lbs. DA. It ain't complex. I keep a service strength hammer spring, 12 lb trigger return spring, and do a bit of polishing here and there. With the newer revolvers, I can't ever, ever get them out of the double digits. I also dislike that any time I buy a newer S&W I basically have to set money aside for a spring kit, an extended firing pin, and a decent set of stocks.
I think that we get so hung up in nostalgia that we forget how nice modern stuff can be. the scandium models, the .357 J frames that came along, the 8 shot cylinders, 9mm revolver, the 1913 light rails, red dot ready revolvers are really nice to have, and I feel that we take them for granted. the MIM that everyone gnashes their teeth in woe and misery about is a huge step up from the electro hardening process that made any polishing or customization a sketchy proposition.
I've got a 1917, a Victory, a Model 10, 64, 586, 625, and the TRR8. They're all happy occupying space on the same table. I seem to shoot my 1917 with a peculiar accuracy that is surprising for an old war horse. It still puts big holes reliably where I tell it to. When something goes bump in the night, I take alot of comfort in eight shots and an attached flashlight with my 327.
I've only had to use the modern warranty once. It was a tedious process, but well honored by them.