All that I can tell that its an old top break S&W. It looks as though it is nickle plated. I have not handled this pistol personally so thats all I can tell from the photo. A lady my GF knows wants to sell it.
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All that I can tell that its an old top break S&W. It looks as though it is nickle plated. I have not handled this pistol personally so thats all I can tell from the photo. A lady my GF knows wants to sell it.
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American by birth, southern by the grace of American Van Lines
http://i823.photobucket.com/albums/z...l_launcher.gif
Looks to be a 2nd Model S&W .32 Hammerless. The 1st Model had a slightly different top latch, and the 3rd Model did away with the pinned front sight.
American by birth, southern by the grace of American Van Lines
http://i823.photobucket.com/albums/z...l_launcher.gif
Here is a link to the different .32 cal Models: http://www.armchairgunshow.com/image...Hless-Mods.jpg
And a link to the 38's: http://www.armchairgunshow.com/image...Hless-Mods.jpg
I used to have a third model Smith & Wesson New Departure Safety Hammerless. It was very well made but grossly underpowered for self-defence use. The long heavy double action pull was to help make the revolver safer around small children. The idea was that a little child would not have the strength to fire the piece if found unattended. Although I'm sure it did not stop the little tikes from trying
They were made in two calibers (.32 S&W Short and .38 S&W). About a quarter million were made in both calibers over a 53 year production run. They were too good to throw away so a large number have probably survived
Last edited by Eliakim; 09-27-11 at 18:27.
“We didn't love freedom enough. And even more - we had no awareness of the real situation... We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward” ― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
If memory serves, Col Appelgate used one of these in 38 S&W. His experiences with a machette wielding attacker in Mexico were reportedly instrumental in S&Ws introduction of the Centennial Model in .38 Spl.
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