What is the design advantage to having the firing pin on the frame instead of the hammer?
This is a hammer with a firing pin attached on a bushing.
Anything else is neither a hammer or a firing pin
Hammer nose, not firing pin, in S & W speak.![]()
My new S&W revolvers work just fine, and I have never had a light strike with any of them. Plus, my S&W revolvers have better triggers than anything Ruger makes.I don't know if this is true or not but some of the personnal at my shooting range/gun store told me that it was strictly a safety deal. Also, some states like California might not approve Smith and Wesson revolvers if they did not move the firing pin to the frame like other revolver manufactures. I have three Smiths with the old firing pin on hammer and one with the new firing pin in the frame. The action is not as nice on the new revolver as with the old revolvers.
Summary, keep your older revolvers. If you want to buy a new revolver I would buy a Ruger. They have perfected there transfer bar/firing pin system and now their revolvers have a better action than the current Smith & Wesson revolvers.
Too Bad!!!
In that case, a firing pin only exists on a model 53. That has the only valid reason to exist on the frame!
I realize old thread, but was hoping someone would say what they do.
15 1/2 year old thread.
Ahh, haaa..A
I realize old thread,.
I think the movement of the firing pin from the hammer to the frame was done to increase the cartridge circle to increase the round count of the Model 27 from 6 to 8. The chamber pattern radius was increased by something like .030”. That necessitated a new hammer design, or they could make lemonade from lemons and change the firing pin to a frame mounted pin and increase commonality between the different frame sizes.