I didn't know the LH 24-3 3" has a K frame grip frame. Is this true?
I'll have to check mine this evening?
Any idea how many were made?
I'll have to check mine this evening?
Any idea how many were made?
Thanks!
I have both K and N frame combats. I'll be busy this evening.![]()
To sell guns and make money.......Anything else is pure fantasy or a guess.
Skeeter was writing for Shooting Times.
A lot of handgun enthusiasts were clamoring for a .44 Special at the time. Smith correctly recognized it as a niche market of knowledgeable revolver enthusiasts (the "Gun Of The Week" era began a few years later.). The .44 Special was a handloaders proposition, unless you were happy with the anemic 246-grain LRN factory load.
That's what drove the decision to make the 7,500 24-3s in standard lengths.
The Lew Horton 3" was a probably inspired by John Jovino's custom big bore snubs he built for LEOs, which were usually 3" RBs.
Jovino typically worked his magic on Model 25s, and I don't know why on earth Horton didn't go with that model as the basis for their run. A 3" .45 Colt would have made infinitely more sense.
^^^^^^^If I Remember right S&W made 2500 of the 24-3's with the 4" barrel and the rest were split up between the the 6.5" barrel and 3 inch barrel. They do command a decent price today. My 624 with 6.5" barrel feels like a light loaded 38 special and this is with Winchesters 200 grain silvertip at 900 fps. All I know I'm not planning to sell the two 24-3"s and the one 624 anytime soon. Frank
I didn't know the LH 24-3 3" has a K frame grip frame. Is this true?
I'll have to check mine this evening?
Any idea how many were made?
A novelty more than anything else. They do look neat, but the difference in concealability is minimal in comparison with a 4" gun. The 3" gun remains an N-frame and that's where the bulk of the revolver is, in the frame, not in one inch less barrel length, even if it has a slightly smaller grip frame. Still, a large and heavy revolver.
Anyone have any good info (or an educated guess) on the intended market and use of the 3" Lew Horton 24-3 back in the early 1980s
Was the idea to sell a relatively unique low volume item that would become an instant collectible or were they meant to be used, and if so by whom.