The Really Old Chief's Special Thread

Figured I'd add mine to the album... ser. #1668. It's got some wear, but functions flawlessly.

Ben,

Welcome to the forum.

That's a beauty. Did someone add the MOP grips?

I ask because after WW II, S&W no longer used medallions in their premium grips. Therefore it's possible the MOP grips are original and would make the gun very scarce, but only a factory historical letter will confirm that.
 
Thanks for the welcome. No idea if the grips are original. However, I do plan to do factory letters on this and a flat latch S&W .32 snubby I picked up from the same estate.
 
Ben, I echo Jim's welcome. You sure started out with a "bang", if you'll forgive the choice of words! That s a beautiful baby chief that you have there, and with that low serial number, you are the envy of many 'baby chief' admirers here. You will find some of the most knowledgeable smith and Wesson experts in the world on this forum, and the are a friendly and collegial group, ever ready to share with beginner or other experts. You just heard from one of them above (no, not me). Enjoy, and welcome again from West Virginia!!!
 
Jim, I was just looking at Ben's photo again, and it looks like the rear sideplate screw has a flat head. If this is the original screw, does this indicate that the gun came with magnas? I have never seen the flathead screw used with issue service style stocks, they usually have a rounded head screw.
 
Looking for assistance

Hi just joined. Looking to figure out what year the J Frame Airweight Chiefs Special .38 that my Dad left me is. The original box which I have says "Smith & Wesson 38 Chiefs Special Airweight Blued Round Butt 2 inch". The number on the butt of the gun is 43463 with no letters. There was no model number behind the yoke. It has a hand ejector. It has 5 screws on the right side of the gun, none on the front of the trigger guard under the barrel and no strain screw. Thank you for any assistance you can provide.
 
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Welcome aboard the forum.

You have a "Model of 1953 .38 Chiefs Special Airweight" from ~ Jan 1954, built on the "New" J frame.

It's one of the relatively few with a lock screw on the top side plate screw only seen on alloy frames.
 
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Trade glock for model 36:)!

I have a glock 31 (357sig) with trijicon sights and complete ghost 3.5lb trigger and Zev Tec v4 firing pin. Galco royal tuck iwb holster. And 3 mags.
Short story, buddy took me to range to shoot nothing but smiths and now I'm hooked!! I've never shot that good in my life and I've shot many different semi autos and cheap revolvers. I'm in love with smiths now!
He's got a model 36 nickel and it's a no dash. But it's weird because everything I have heard says that if the serial numbers have 3 letters in front of the numbers it has to be a 36-? Something. I want this to be a same value trade. Him and I both don't know anything about smiths. I need help folks. Thanks for your time.
 

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New2Wesson,

Welcome to the forum.

Well you didn't say but I'm presuming that the gun you've attached has a 3 letter prefix.

Unfortunately, you've become the victim of a "rule of thumb" that is not accurate:

The 3 letter prefix serial #s began in 1984 on the Model 36.

But the Model 36-1 began in 1967 but only for 3" heavy barrel models.

And the Model 36-2 didn't begin until 1988. So there is 4 years where a 2" Chiefs would have a 3 letter prefix and no dash #.

And now you know the gun was made between 1984 and 1988.
 
I'll take this opportunity to add my baby to the album. sn 11920, smooth ramp front sight, likely spring of '52. Carried by an Alabama LEO back in the day.

The seller and I had a problem known to Cool Hand Luke... as "a failure to communicate." She said the stocks were original to the gun. They're not. She offered to take it back, but by that time this little chief and I had sort of grown on each other. It's stayin' right here, and after talking with Craig Spegel a few days ago, when my number comes up (soon) I hope to have him do something extra special for this little feller.
 

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I have a glock 31 (357sig) with trijicon sights and complete ghost 3.5lb trigger and Zev Tec v4 firing pin. Galco royal tuck iwb holster. And 3 mags.
Short story, buddy took me to range to shoot nothing but smiths and now I'm hooked!! I've never shot that good in my life and I've shot many different semi autos and cheap revolvers. I'm in love with smiths now!
He's got a model 36 nickel and it's a no dash. But it's weird because everything I have heard says that if the serial numbers have 3 letters in front of the numbers it has to be a 36-? Something. I want this to be a same value trade. Him and I both don't know anything about smiths. I need help folks. Thanks for your time.

New2Wesson,

Both of the handguns that you are talking about are fine arms but it is hard to think of two others which would be so different. Beside the obvious points that one is a revolver and the other a pistol with their completely different manuals of arms, they have different primary uses. One is more capable for concealed carry, the other for exposed carry. The recoil and terminal energy of the two are at opposite extremes as is the cost and availability of the ammo.

Depending upon a number of their variables which you haven't listed, the two handguns have essentially the same basic cost. Since they are so different in so many ways, each of you will be happy if your choice fits your needs.

Bob
 
I have always disliked, and avoided the term pre model.

I'd take Tom Brady's ex girl friend Bridget Moynahan over Gisele Bundchen any day of the week
 
Holy smokes thanks for the input.. so what I'm gathering is that since it's AEY4931, this guy's model 36, should be a 36 dash something right? He said there is no dash, does that mean it was replaced ?
 
I understand the purpose for both tools, I just didn't want to trade a newer hammer for An old hammer unless it's of the same value, that's what it boils down too in this trade. I'm gonna hold out until another old smith or any smith comes my way. I'm so upset I didn't discover them sooner, I'm sure I've passed up a few and had no idea lol
 
I am new to the forum but I believe I have one of these guns I inherited from my Dad. it has a number on but of gun- 8397. any info on what I have would be appreciated.DSC03657.jpg

DSC03660.jpg

DSC03664.jpg
 
Holy smokes thanks for the input.. so what I'm gathering is that since it's AEY4931, this guy's model 36, should be a 36 dash something right? He said there is no dash, does that mean it was replaced ?

No, please read again:

"The 3 letter prefix serial #s began in 1984 on the Model 36.

But the Model 36-1 began in 1967 but only for 3" heavy barrel models.

And the Model 36-2 didn't begin until 1988. So there is 4 years where a 2" Chiefs would have a 3 letter prefix and no dash #."

The 2" barrel version Chiefs went from Model 36 pre dash to Model 36-2 in 1988, four year after the 3 Letter prefix began 1984. There were no 36-1 Chiefs made with 2" barrel.
# AEY4931 was made in 1984.
 
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I am new to the forum but I believe I have one of these guns I inherited from my Dad. it has a number on but of gun- 8397. any info on what I have would be appreciated.View attachment 266430

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You have a ".38 Chiefs Special" built on the first J frame and introduced in 1950. Yours is a later version with the new ribbed barrel and ramp front sight, most likely shipped in the first half of 1952. These are known by collectors and forum members as the "Baby Chiefs" and Baby J frame".

It was replaced by the Model of 1953 New J frame, ".38 Chiefs Special" and went on to become named the Model 36 in mid-1957.
 
My first pistol, apart from the Colt.38 spl which the Border Patrol issued. Bought one in El Paso, Texas in 1955 for off duty and undercover carry. At that time the prices were unbelievable. Unfortunately my wife was much better with it than I was.
 
Will regular j frame grips fit the baby chiefs special? any grips for sale out there?

No, Pre 1953 I frame grips back to 1896 are the same size and interchange with Baby Chiefs.

"Regular" J frame grips are Model of 1953 and later, and are the same size and will interchange with Model of 1953 I frames.
 
I have always disliked, and avoided the term pre model.

I'd take Tom Brady's ex girl friend Bridget Moynahan over Gisele Bundchen any day of the week





Hmmm. The actress vs. the retired model and fashion entrepreneur! Gisele is loyal, witty, a Brazilian national heroine asked to walk in the last Olympics as such, and a talented raconteur as a talk show guest.


All I really know of Bridget is her work on, Blue Bloods, where she reminds me of the mom she plays and maybe a school teacher or the asst. DA she plays. She actually looks a lot like my first college Journalism teacher, who was very good at her job.


I know that both Bridget and Giselle modeled, and once they had their first jobs, wouldn't be "pre-models", ha! So, is a "pre-model" a girl who aspires to model?


As for the guns, I think the men should keep what they have and shop elsewhere for types they want. Both have essentially defense guns, but one is a concealed specialty type. I'd psss on it and look for a Model 60-7 in that role.


Or, if this fellow new to revolvers just wants a good S&W, buy a nice used M-64, or opt for .357 power and get M-66.


The old Chiefs Special doesn't have the same primary defense/battle role of the Glock.
 
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Hello,, I was hoping someone could tell me the age of this one?
It belonged to my dad,, it's a model 36 and has No dash- after the 36, from what I have learned, apparently no dash represents an earlier model?.. He had this for as long as I can remember,, I just never remembered the exact details? the sn is 44135xx
thanks a lot..
 

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All I care about is that I find Bridget Moynahan more attractive. That's it.
Hmmm. The actress vs. the retired model and fashion entrepreneur! Gisele is loyal, witty, a Brazilian national heroine asked to walk in the last Olympics as such, and a talented raconteur as a talk show guest.


All I really know of Bridget is her work on, Blue Bloods, where she reminds me of the mom she plays and maybe a school teacher or the asst. DA she plays. She actually looks a lot like my first college Journalism teacher, who was very good at her job.


I know that both Bridget and Giselle modeled, and once they had their first jobs, wouldn't be "pre-models", ha! So, is a "pre-model" a girl who aspires to model?


As for the guns, I think the men should keep what they have and shop elsewhere for types they want. Both have essentially defense guns, but one is a concealed specialty type. I'd psss on it and look for a Model 60-7 in that role.


Or, if this fellow new to revolvers just wants a good S&W, buy a nice used M-64, or opt for .357 power and get M-66.


The old Chiefs Special doesn't have the same primary defense/battle role of the Glock.
 
Just picked up a early Chief 5 screw 4 digit serial 71xx. Found out year was 1950-52 but was wondering which flat latch it should have. Gun also has smooth ramped front sight. Currently has newer style latch.
 
The "newer style latch" as you describe it was actually used on the first approximately 100 Chiefs (the Baby Chiefs). It has also been observed as original on a few higher numbered guns like yours.

Some guns in the 7XXX serial range actually shipped earlier than lower numbered guns such as:

322X……shipped in December 1953.
46xx……shipped in Dec '54.

Obviously, there was little correlation between s/n and shipping dates.

My point is, your latch could be original. For one thing, to change the latch from a flat latch to a new style, the gun must be disassembled and the locking bolt that the latch attaches to must also be changed. The latches attach with different type screws.

So it's not a 5 minute job, but it could have been changed, there's just no way to know for sure unless the gun is owned by the original owner.

To answer your question, most Baby Chiefs 5 screw guns came with the 1st style flat latch until the 2nd style flat latch began to show up sporadically in the 25XXX serial Range:

1st style flat latch used only on the Baby J frame and K frame airweights:

photo1-1.jpg

Photo by jackvs1


2nd style flat latch began on the Improved I frames, Baby Js and K frame airweights just prior to the Models of 1953 New J frame shown here:

OldChief.jpg
 
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The "newer style latch" as you describe it was actually used on the first approximately 100 Chiefs (the Baby Chiefs). It has also been observed as original on a few higher numbered guns like yours.

Some guns in the 7XXX serial range actually shipped earlier than lower numbered guns such as:

322X……shipped in December 1953.
46xx……shipped in Dec '54.

Obviously, there was little correlation between s/n and shipping dates.

My point is, your latch could be original. For one thing, to change the latch from a flat latch to a new style, the gun must be disassembled and the locking bolt that the latch attaches to must also be changed. The latches attach with different type screws.

So it's not a 5 minute job, but it could have been changed, there's just no way to know for sure unless the gun is owned by the original owner.

To answer your question, most Baby Chiefs 5 screw guns came with the 1st style flat latch until the 2nd style flat latch began to show up sporadically in the 25XXX serial Range:

1st style flat latch used only on the Baby J frame and K frame airweights:

photo1-1.jpg

Photo by jackvs1


2nd style flat latch began on the Improved I frames, Baby Js and K frame airweights just prior to the Models of 1953 New J frame shown here:

OldChief.jpg
Thank you. I think it is an old NYPD gun so I would not be surprised if is was changed at their range for some reason
 
Jim:

Just for information, my smooth ramp Baby Chief has a serial of 10,6xx, and shipped in May of 1952, before the two much lower serial number examples you cite above! It has, I believe, the first style thumb latch. I have a bunch of photos available, taken by the forum member who sold it to me, who is a much better photographer than I. I just have not uploaded them to photobucket yet.

Best Regards, Les
 
so I'm jumping in late to this and haven't read everything, but a local dealer told me he has a very nice 36 no dash for $600. Is that worth a 30 minute drive to look at?

Come on. Really? Maybe you should have "read everything." A Model 36 doesn't really fit here -- far too new. I really don't intend to be sarcastic, but... you have too many posts to....

Bob
 
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