S&W 38/44

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Hello, new to the forum. I have an opportunity to purchase this 38/44 in box. It also has the cleaning kit but not pictured. S prefix so post war. What are these going for currently?

Thanks!
 

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The .38/44 Outdoorsman model is the most desirable of the .38/44 breed. You might check to see if its chambers have been lengthened to accept .357 Magnum ammunition. I doubt that .38/44 has been modified but it is worth checking to be 100% sure. What is the SN?
 
Hello, new to the forum. I have an opportunity to purchase this 38/44 in box. It also has the cleaning kit but not pictured. S prefix so post war. What are these going for currently?

Thanks!
I'm thinking this was made early 1950's. The box looks like average condition and probably worth $175 - $200. Tools, if similar to the package Chad showed - about the same. The gun looks good, has some wear and use figure between "very good" and "excellent". Probably $1400 - $1500 would be a decent package price.
 
The .38/44 Outdoorsman model is the most desirable of the .38/44 breed. You might check to see if its chambers have been lengthened to accept .357 Magnum ammunition. I doubt that .38/44 has been modified but it is worth checking to be 100% sure. What is the SN?
Thanks! How would I accurately check to determine if the chamber had been lengthened? I understand why people did it, I don’t know how to check for it.
 
Either a .357 fired case or a loaded cartridge. I don’t consider elongated chambers to be a deal killer for an average to lower condition .38/44, but it would negatively affect the value of a high condition specimen as it makes the revolver non-original.
 
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The 6.5 inch is rare, more so in the pre-war model but post war is rare too. I think that is a $2k+ package, maybe $3k if a couple knowledgeable collectors wanted it. I recently paid $1300 for a 6.5 (just the gun) showing wear which went originally to the Washington State Patrol and felt fortunate to find it.
 
Very very nice. I have one not nearly as nice as yours I picked up, gun only, a couple of years ago for (if memory serves) right around $900 and I considered that to be a very fair price. I would put yours at the $1,500 plus level. If it is as nice as the photos look $2k would not be unreasonable.
 
Either a .357 fired case or a loaded cartridge. I don’t consider elongated chambers to be a deal killer for an average to lower condition .38/44, but it would negatively affect the value of a high condition specimen as it makes the revolver non-original.
Loaded cartridge did not fit. Chambers not lengthened. Thanks for the advice!
 

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