Just to split hairs, that's not a Pre-10. The gun that became the Model 10 was not introduced until April of 1948. It had the short-throw hammer; this gun still has the long action. Collectors would identify it as a postwar .38 M&P.
Thank you for this info, when I looked it up in the 3rd ed Cat it was listed under pre 10. Did I read it wrong?
First, that's an excellent score at that price. Congratulations!
Second, I hone my knives really sharp so that I can split hairs really thin. Many collectors use the "pre" designation with some models to mean anything made after WWII, and a few people even refer the prewar M&Ps as "Pre-10s." I like the "Pre" designation as a shorthand way to identify members of a specific design class produced before the Model numbers got hung on the product line, but I try to hew closely to the design of the model-marked guns. As you count backwards, the "Pre" designation hits a brick wall (or should) with the first model you encounter that has a significant difference from the model-marked gun. Or so say I.
In the grand scheme of things, what the heck difference does it make. I still knew what you meant.
I guess I need a little refresher here, I didn't hear 'Transitional' mentioned.
I have to guess because it is not, even though I thought it maybe. So, if you will please run it by me one more time. Transitional refers to what exactly & how is this 'S' Series post war M&P differ? Thanx already!
D R
I had a related question, I saw a gun of the same type and vintage and it had rounded butt grips are these found on m&p ?
Serial number S 8252XX.
Excellent buy. I can tell you that it most likely shipped in April or May of 1946.
The postwar M&P revolvers all have the improved safety block (indicated by the S prefix) and most of them have the knobless ejector rod. I don't think I usually hear the postwar M&Ps characterized as "transitional," though of course they are -- long action guns with some postwar design features.
Good information DC.Russ, in one of my posts above I should have said "many of them have the knobless ejector rod" rather than "most of them..." I don't actually know what the actual counts were for the two postwar knob styles.
But I have seen knobless ejector rods on 1947 M&Ps, including one from May of that year with a serial number under S900000. I suspect the with/without distinction may be a half-and-half thing among the long-action K-frames. Yes, some K-frames were still getting large knob ejector rods in early 1948 -- the earliest K-38 Masterpieces, for example. But the knobless ejector had already appeared in M&P production nearly a year earlier; there are pictures of them in threads on this forum. And the two inch M&Ps, of which many were produced in the postwar years, never had knobbed rods in the first place.
The "transitional" guns were transitional even inside this one defining feature.![]()
I have a S&W .38 Spl. (pictured) that I had the manufacturer research for me. cost was
$50.00 but well worth it.
Turns out it is a .38 Hand Ejector, Military & Police Model of 1905, Third Change. Company records indicate (serial # 153800) was shipped from the factory on May 10,1910 and delivered to Hibbard spencer Bartlett & Company, Chicago. Shipped with a 4 inch barrel, nickel finish and checkered walnut grips. Shown are aftermarket grips. Also it is a square butt frame. I don't have idea on value but I paid $200.00 about a year ago.