Tom Servo
Member

I think everyone above touched on the qualities that make the 67 such a great all-around pistol. In addition, it makes a great training gun for new shooters.
The Model 15 has always been my favorite handgun platform, but for one reason or another, I never got around to picking one up. This one came my way a couple of years back.
The owner brought it in wrapped in a sock, which she carried dangling from her fingers like it was a dead snake. Someone had shot it until it was filthy, sprayed it down with WD-40, and left it in a shoebox somewhere for years. The cylinder stop wasn't locking, and it didn't feel like it was locking in the rear when shut.
It was her father-in-law's service gun, which he carried until his retirement in 1998. That a police officer would still be carrying a .38 K-Frame in 1998 made me wonder. It must have had some kind of history, but all she knew was that she "hates guns and wants it out of the house."
OK. Fine. If the gun couldn't be fixed, at least I could salvage the stainless rear sight. I offered $75, which she gladly took.
As it turns out, the rust had not turned to pitting, and the action was simply caked-up with dried oil. Once I'd excised the grime, everything worked fine. The original owner had done a bit of polishing to the rebound spring, which makes me think he took some pride in it, and that the gun had been well-maintained before his kids got to it.
It's my second most accurate K-Frame, and worth exponentially more than what I paid for it.