Your 1950 3.5" Target 44SPL is truly a Gem.
Yes It has a light coating of rust prevent. Sorry, I should have wiped it clean for the pictures. I guess I'm too overly protective of my guns.What a great gun. I too love the stocks and agree with you that the checkering was most likely done after it left the factory.
I assume that it is coated in wax, oil or cosmoline?
Thanks for sharing,
I agree with you about the ejector rod and the ejector rod hole not being nicely finished. Also, having just purchased a new ejector rod from Brownell's for my model 15-2, I noticed that there is little, if any, polishing is done to that part and the bluing is nowhere as nice as the bluing on my revolver. The ejector rod on your revolver would closely match the new rod I just received from Brownell's.Nobody can guarantee that a gun was unfired. Certainly they are test fired at the factory prior to shipping. Maybe "un-used" would be a better term. Only a very slight drag mark on the cylinder, and no case head marks on the recoil shield. On most post war S&W's I've seen over the years, the ejector rod hole in the crane is not a nicely finished hole, most are rough. Work the ejector rod a few times and the finish on the rod is marred. The gun is just as I found it some forty years ago. No touch up blue, no mods of any kind. Only lightly handled. Since S&W always gave president to law enforcement orders, it's possible an outside associate or friend of some cop had them order it on their letterhead, knowing that it would get priority. I just can't figure an officer carrying a non issue weapon. Who knows?
*I just can't figure an officer carrying a non issue weapon. Who knows?
Many large dept's fancy themselves as a sort of military organization, so weapons standardization is the norm. A good friend of my mine who was on the Illinois State Police for many years carried a .38 Chiefs Special as a backup. He's retired now and that gun is always with him."There are pros and cons to all of these systems. The worst arguments I have ever seen for uniformity, and the ones that prove that the command personnel need to be fired, are the concept of ammo/magazine exchange* (you waste all your ammo and expect me to give you mine? Hah!), or parade ground appearance silliness with the goal of every officer looking the same. I don't object to the honor guard looking the same - that's a goal of its own, but has nothing to do with being the police and doing the work. Shiny gear, Class A style uniforms and hats are clownshoes. My experience is that there is an inverse correlation between the appearance fetish of an agency and its core proficiency and integrity."
To me, the worst example of "uniformity" was the Illinois State Police and their M39 S&Ws. The handguns were OK, but all of their troopers were required to carry them in cross draw flap holsters on the left side of the Sam Browne belt, EVEN THE LEFT HANDED TROOPERS!!!
Many large dept's fancy themselves as a sort of military organization, so weapons standardization is the norm. A good friend of my mine who was on the Illinois State Police for many years carried a .38 Chiefs Special as a backup. He's retired now and that gun is always with him.