Can someone enlighten me the term "high polish" as it applies to blued revolvers of the post-war era? I don't know if this refers to an extra-cost finishing option for any revolver of that period, or whether it is the "standard" blue finish for the company's top-line revolvers.
I just bought a Pre-Model 23 that looks very much like the ones in this thread:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/5401039...261014872#9261014872
Mine is serial number S1442xx, which I hear from an informed source puts its shipping date in mid-1956. SCSW-3 says there is a premium for the "High Polish" finish on this model, and I'm not smart enough to know what that is without seeing a couple of different guns side by side. The one I just paid for looks awfully polished to me, so I presume it is a high polish finish.
Mine does not have the cokes seen in that other thread. It comes with diamond Magnas.
I overpaid for the gun by probably 10-15 percent, but I was willing to because the store had done a bunch of PPTs for me in the last year. Every one of those is a money-loser for them, so I didn't mind doing a transaction that leaves a few dollars on the black ink side of their ledger.
The gun is in California's 10-day purgatory at the moment. (I've GOT to get that C&R license!) As soon as the revolver is in my hands, I'll put some photos up. I think this one will deserve a letter. There were only about 6,000 of these .38 Special N-frames produced on the 1950 model.
David Wilson
I just bought a Pre-Model 23 that looks very much like the ones in this thread:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/5401039...261014872#9261014872
Mine is serial number S1442xx, which I hear from an informed source puts its shipping date in mid-1956. SCSW-3 says there is a premium for the "High Polish" finish on this model, and I'm not smart enough to know what that is without seeing a couple of different guns side by side. The one I just paid for looks awfully polished to me, so I presume it is a high polish finish.
Mine does not have the cokes seen in that other thread. It comes with diamond Magnas.
I overpaid for the gun by probably 10-15 percent, but I was willing to because the store had done a bunch of PPTs for me in the last year. Every one of those is a money-loser for them, so I didn't mind doing a transaction that leaves a few dollars on the black ink side of their ledger.
The gun is in California's 10-day purgatory at the moment. (I've GOT to get that C&R license!) As soon as the revolver is in my hands, I'll put some photos up. I think this one will deserve a letter. There were only about 6,000 of these .38 Special N-frames produced on the 1950 model.
David Wilson