S&W 686, what can you tell me?

Be aware that you are on a slippery slope. These L-frame guns come in sets: 2-1/2", 4" , 6", and 8-3/8" barrels. You have the 'rare' 3" barrel, now you need to get the rest.

Don't worry about dash numbers, just find the other barrel lengths, my wife and I have 3 sets of barrels with frames -- M-19, M-586, and M-686. Good luck in your quest.
 
I am not really a collector, but a SHOOTER!(:>))
When the CS-1's overruns hit the market, I was at the Indianapolis 500 Gun Show. I took one look and reached for my wallet. A distributor had a few and it looked to me like a "Pefect Packing Pistol" (as per Taffin). I took it home and that double under lugged barrel holds so well for me, that I was able to shoot that revolver better than any other .357 I had tried (and I had a few). I did a Jerry Michulek trigger job but kept it so it would reliably fire any current primers at the time (and after). After all, this was to be a "Practical Revolver" and it certainly has been for all of these years. It will shoot well under an inch at 25 yards off a rest, and I have come to call revolvers I own that seemed to about half shoot themselves, "Owner Friendly". I liked the CS-1 so well and bought a six inch 686 later and still have both.



I have taken a bushel basket of edible small game with my handguns and the 686's do an excellent job!

FWIW
Dale53
 
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Condolences on the passing of your dad, but congratulations on the acquisition of a wonderful revolver. That series has many many aficionados and I gather that you also are in that camp! By the way, a warm welcome to this great forum for the exchange of information and knowledge.

May you enjoy many years of shooting pleasure with that, and have the opportunity to acquire yet other examples of such fine craftsmanship to enhance your joy of ownership.
 
In my completely unscientific estimation, the 686 and its variants are the most popular revolvers in the S&W line - certainly on this forum. Yours is certainly no exception. Shoot it safely and take care of it, please.
 
Funny but true. I have a 2.5", 3", and 4" 686+ and a 6" 586. Then I learned to control myself................for now, anyway......... :D

Ok I am intrigued. Where might I find the other barrel configurations for this revolver? And are they easily swapped?What are the reasons for each length? I assume the longer the barrel the more accurate the sights and bullet travel?
 
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It takes proper tools and knowledge to swap barrels properly without damaging the frame and setting the correct gap between the cylinder and barrel.
You can keep an eye on the classified section here to look out for other 686s. There are also a lot of online options to look for other revolvers. If you're friendly with a local shop let them know what you're looking for and hopefully when they get one in they'll set it aside until you can see it and decide if you want to get it.
 
Ok I am intrigued. Where might I find the other barrel configurations for this revolver? And are they easily swapped?What are the reasons for each length? I assume the longer the barrel the more accurate the sights and bullet travel?

I am uncertain what you mean by "find". But this should help:

This is what S&W offers now:

Revolvers | Smith & Wesson

©2021 Smith & Wesson

Just clicking on the Model 686 Plus shows you all of the available barrel lengths:

Model 686 PLUS | Smith & Wesson

©2021 Smith & Wesson

2.5", 3", 4.125" (most folks just call it 4"), 5", 6", and 7".

In a 686+ I have these:

2.5"

iscs-yoda-albums-s-and-w-revolvers-picture12690-686-001-a.jpg


3"

iscs-yoda-albums-s-and-w-revolvers-picture15726-686-6-a.jpg


4"

iscs-yoda-albums-s-and-w-revolvers-picture13552-model-686-6-plus.jpg


And for a size comparison this next is an older 6" M586:


iscs-yoda-albums-s-and-w-revolvers-picture22251-586-transformed-1-a.jpg


I'm no expert on barrel interchangeability but the old Dan Wesson revolvers were designed to do just that and often came with 3 different barrels that could be unscrewed and changed. I think you need a gunsmith to remove these S&W barrels, you don't just pop them off by unscrewing them BICBW.

There are two answers for the "reasons" for the different barrel lengths. The fun answer is "because". Because folks like these guns and collect them and want them. ;)

But the technical answer is that they do have different uses but even that depends on the users. Technically, the shorter barrels are more easily concealed/easier to carry/easier to wield indoors as house guns or in the field. The longer barrels are more appropriate for hunting and long range shooting because bullets travel faster and farther from longer barrels. And they are more accurate, especially at long distances.

OTOH, you'll get comments that differ from mine from so many lovers of these guns that my advice is fasten your seat belt and pay attention to all of the comments because you'll learn something every time. There are some real experts on the Forum. I'm just a journeyman, lifetime shooter and lover of all things in the world of firearms, mostly. ;)
 
Deepest condolences for your loss

Nice piece, but it has definitely been re-barreled with a much later production barrel. To my knowledge all 3" 686s are round butts and it has the newer font. Since it's not original it's hard to valuate it, so basically worth what someone wants to pay for it. I think $750 to $850 is a safe price range, but it could go higher to the right person. Nevertheless, it's a great shooter that'll last several generations.
 
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It takes proper tools and knowledge to swap barrels properly without damaging the frame and setting the correct gap between the cylinder and barrel.
You can keep an eye on the classified section here to look out for other 686s. There are also a lot of online options to look for other revolvers. If you're friendly with a local shop let them know what you're looking for and hopefully when they get one in they'll set it aside until you can see it and decide if you want to get it.

I see, so when you guys say "collect all the barrels", you mean collect all the 686 revolvers with different barrel lengths, not just collecting barrels by themselves, as they are not really interchangeable without a gun smith.
 
I see, so when you guys say "collect all the barrels", you mean collect all the 686 revolvers with different barrel lengths, not just collecting barrels by themselves, as they are not really interchangeable without a gun smith.

Well, not ALL of us have to collect all barrel lengths. I bought my first 4in 686 in August 1986 and still have all the OEM paperwork plus handwritten and register receipts, box, OEM stocks + pachmayr grips with that receipt also.

A few years ago I bought another 686 4in in order to take the load off of my first! Plus this second one has the same alpha prefix "AUExxxx" . I spent some $$$ on it to get the "M" modification though they forgot to stamp the "M". I also took it to a LGS to have the B/C reduced from 0.009" down to 0.003". Did my own trigger job and stoning. What a great shooter!

I guess the bottom line is to absolutely decide if you are going to collect shooters or pieces of art. IMO, there is NO in between. I chose my OEM 1st purchase to keep as pristine as possible and picked up a same era 4in 686 to shoot the **** out of! I love it/them!

You will notice that I updated my grips on both:
  • Top-Left is my 1st and I use/used CTC grips for dry-fire practice
  • Lower right is my 2nd 686 with Hogue grips

Now that I have my 1st 686 preserved, I put the original Congalo Alves Target grips back on it. BTW, the only time the original grips were on it was for photo-ops only...:cool:

AGAIN is....... pick your own poison! This stuff is indeed addictive! ;)
 

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Hey CH4 Bill already offered him $1200.

I was just being hyperbolic, that's what every one of them I see on gunbroker is listed for.
Forgive my bad manners, yes, sorry for your loss and since it was your late father's gun, no matter WHAT it is, its priceless. Again, enjoy that puppy. My 686 is like everyone else has already said, a shooting machine.
 
I see, so when you guys say "collect all the barrels", you mean collect all the 686 revolvers with different barrel lengths, not just collecting barrels by themselves, as they are not really interchangeable without a gun smith.

Yeah collecting complete revolvers in different lengths. In the 686 I have the 2.5" and 6" with a 4" 586 thrown in too. The 8 3/8" is one I've rarely seen in person. Would be a great hunting 357. My 4" 586 and 6" 686 are two of the most most accurate centerfire handguns I have ever owned in 30+ years of handgun shooting.
 
Quick question.

Everything else being equal (same bbl length, etc), how much of a $$$ difference would there be between a M586 and a M686?

Just curious, and thanks!

Rob

Looked on GB and there was zero M586s listed.
 
L frame .357 Smiths are the excellent reply to the Colt's bestseller, the Python, that had an unbelievable success with his look of the full underlug and the vented rib.
Please check the left side of the frame under the stocks (grips, if you like better): the black area in your pics ( post #5) is the phone's shadow I guess, but that S shaped irregular line is disturbing my fanatic eyes.... I hope it is only crud, not worn steel
 
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