Your First S&W

My first S&W was a 6" 686-3 purchased by me for me back in 1990 best I can recall. She's been nothing but a joy to shoot, and looks as good today as the day I brought her home. I believe I gave 200 bucks to call her mine.
 
There seems to be a common theme emerging from this thread:

1 Don't sell/trade your first gun because you will live to regret it...

2 Don't sell any S&W you own because you will live to regret it*

*unless it's trade or sale towards another S&W, in which case you'll love the new acquisition, but you'll regret not also having that first Smith...
 
My first Smith & Wesson revolver was a 6-inch 17-4 I bought during the 1980s... I still have it. I taught myself aerial shooting with it one summer. I was working for the U.S. Forest Service in Idaho as a construction inspector. We weren't supposed to have firearms with us, but I was camped by myself at the end of a closed road and I had a whole mountain as a backstop. Every construction inspector I knew took a handgun with them to camp just in case. We just kept them out of sight and never did anything stupid with them. I started with gallon cans I tossed in the air and hit as they fell. By the end of the summer I could hit 1.5 inch square wooden cubes 5 throws out of six. Occasionally I could even get a second hit on them shooting double action. I was shooting about 300 rounds a week at aerial targets.

Whelenshooter
 
I inheareted my father's police T-10(?) revolver in a six in. standard barrel.
I bought for my first pistol: SW99 40cal with a Walther P99 frame and triger.
I want to install a .357 sig barrel if that will work on the SW99, but a 357 sig will work on the M&P 40 cal. frame.
 
My first S&W was a M-53, .22 Remington Jet, 6" with smooth target stocks. Bought it my Senior year in college, 1965. Paid $125, bought it on time and paid $5.00 a month forever, down payment was a nickle Colt Scout .22RF/.22Mag. I still have it and when I finally go Tango Uniform one of my kids will get it. Keep shootin'
 
No one in my family owned guns before. Being outside mostly meant baseball and fishing. And, mom didn't want any guns in her house.

When I was old enough, I had a chance to buy a gun from a friend. I thought they were cool, but I didn't know anything about them.

I bought a 4 inch, nickel model 15 for $100. I'm pretty sure it was nickel and I think it had target grips. The nickel finish was perfect. I don't remember anything else. What I do remember that it shot so well and so smoothly that it was boring. I would load it, point it and shoot what I was aiming at. Not very much recoil, just pop, pop, pop. Of course there was no one around to learn anything from.

What I realize now is that it was a very accurate revolver with a great trigger. I had no idea what I had. I sold it to buy some black gun that I don't remember.

What a shame.:(

Paul
 
Heres my first... 686-6 bought brand new last Thanksgiving. It was a long hard choice between this and a 629 no dash. It came down to comfort and the underlug. The 629 was $629, I paid $719 for the 686. Some would say I made the wrong choice, but Im very happy with my choice. It was a VERY difficult choice though!
 

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1st Smith was a 2" nickel model 36. Still have it.
Shown below with a model 67-1.


100_0735-1.jpg
 
In the early '70's, I got more than interested in shooting my single shot Winchester .410 and my Ithaca Model 49 single shot 22. I wanted a .44 magnum because you guessed it, I saw Dirty Harry and thought it was cool. During that period, Model 29's were almost impossible to obtain, so I settled for a Liberty year Super Blackhawk. Not being satisfied at all with this single action revolver, I searched high and low and also saved my pennies for a real model 29. I finally found a used one nearly 300 miles away in Nashville. I set out to posses this gleaming Holy Grail. So, in early 1977, I drove 600 miles and paid $450 for a 6 1/2" nickel used Model 29-2. It had some modified smooth target stocks that looked almost orange. Over my next couple of years in college, I shot the stuffings out of that gun when I could afford ammo. None of that wimpy .44 Spl, it had to be full house .44 magnum. About the only thing I did was shoot the revolver loose, and develop a real flinch. Sometime in the early '80's when I started to actually work for a living, I let it go. I can't even remember to who or for what. Wish I had the serial number. I've thougt about that old revolver over the years and have wondered who ended up with it and what happened to it. Now that I am a little better off in my mid life crisis, I'm able to afford a few things I want, so I set out to own something similar to my first S&W. Not exactly the same, but just enough to remind me of happier times:

phenson-albums-my-revolvers-picture4828-keith-brown-smooth-targets-osage-orange.jpg


S&W Model 57, Keith Brown Osage Orange Stocks, Shipped October 1981
 
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My 1st S&W was a 6" nickel 27-2 that I bought in 99, sold it a few years later when I bought my 625. Someday will get another one, this time a blue 3 1/2" !


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My first was a model 65(cant remember the dash #) 3 inch round butt made in 1985. It was my dads when he worked plainclothes.
 
My first Smith was a model 10 a friend had for sale. I was a real rookie as far as Smiths went, and when he said it was an M&P, I figured it was what I carried in the Air Force, a model 15. Actually it was just the model 10, but the price was really good so I got it. It in itself is nothing greater than being a Smith and Wesson Model 10, its not mint, doesn't have serial numbered grips or anything else to distinguish it from others. But now its mine. Little did I know what I was getting into. I now own four Smith revolvers and one auto. I'm still a rookie compared to many here, but I'm learning and slowly collecting. This is a great place for a Smith owner to hang out, agreed?
 
I was issued a 2" model 10 on the police force. It was not in very good condition but what I wouldn't give for that particular gun. It had rust on the hammer from the rain. Unfortunately I had to turn it back in when I quit. If I come upon one at a gun show I will get it. It was the gun that made me so fond of S & W.
 
My first gun was a Smith & Wesson Model 29, 4", Nickel, S181480. I put thousands of .44 Spl. through that one. It's the only gun that I wish I had never sold.
 

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