Pre 27 ejector rod question

MTek

Member
Joined
Jul 5, 2020
Messages
17
Reaction score
50
Location
Tacoma, WA
Hi all,

I was cleaning and waxing a new to me pre 27, noticed the ejector rod looks to be machined. Is this correct or is it not an original part? The gun is almost perfect, and this concerns me.

Advise appreciated.
 

Attachments

  • 26D1DE98-93C1-4194-B43B-364CCFC2F71E.jpg
    26D1DE98-93C1-4194-B43B-364CCFC2F71E.jpg
    44.3 KB · Views: 141
Register to hide this ad
Quite welcome Sir.
The rod itself shows little if any use.

When do we see the rest? :)

Here you go my friend. 3.5". Gold box, cleaning tools, and knurled screwdriver came with. I'm pretty proud of it.
 

Attachments

  • 3519B11E-B0A3-400C-9D44-A24C38F3B197.jpg
    3519B11E-B0A3-400C-9D44-A24C38F3B197.jpg
    99.4 KB · Views: 99
  • 03A6BB4C-A392-45E2-B64F-DDC5B6FA8A57.jpg
    03A6BB4C-A392-45E2-B64F-DDC5B6FA8A57.jpg
    85.8 KB · Views: 92
That is a very nice .357 Magnum. I notice that it has a hammer spur the same width as the hammer, or are my eyes deceiving me? If so, it is an early one after they started up with the 1950 Model. I have one in the late 75,xxx serial number range, so would think yours would be fairly close. It seems Smith started installing a wider spur somewhere in April or May, 1950, from examples I have seen here.

Great find!! You will like it a lot. Shoot and enjoy!!
 
That is a very nice .357 Magnum. I notice that it has a hammer spur the same width as the hammer, or are my eyes deceiving me? If so, it is an early one after they started up with the 1950 Model. I have one in the late 75,xxx serial number range, so would think yours would be fairly close. It seems Smith started installing a wider spur somewhere in April or May, 1950, from examples I have seen here.

Great find!! You will like it a lot. Shoot and enjoy!!

Just the angle I think. I just got it out to compare to a 5" 77xxx I have. Both hammers spurs are wider.
 

Attachments

  • 351BCA2C-D28B-4FC1-9C88-D4DE84DD9431.jpg
    351BCA2C-D28B-4FC1-9C88-D4DE84DD9431.jpg
    73.4 KB · Views: 22
That is a very inconspicuous way to tell if a gun has been refinished. It's especially noticeable on guns with the mushroom shaped ejector rod knob. Unfortunately they quit doing that on later guns.
 
There is one exception to fitting the front end of the extractor rod to close the cyl/yoke; it's the Triple Lock:

The TL ext rod does not cam/open the locking system to close the cyl, so it's not machined and therefore blue from the factory on the front edge. When closing the cyl/yoke, the front and middle lock bolts which are connected, are cammed open by the middle lock cam plate in the yoke therefore moves the front locking bolt forward at the same time so only the middle locking bolt is fitted, and to the cam plate. Then when the cyl snaps closed, the front lock bolt upon locking pushes the ctr pin (rear lock bolt) rearward to lock it into the breech face and the three locks lock up simultaneously.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top