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HelmandHunter
11-25-12, 17:08
Looking to buy one, 8 shot, 2.6in bbl.

Anyone own one or have any opinions? Finding them for about $950 currently.

thisaway
12-01-12, 09:00
I have a 327 NG, the "Night Guard" scandium 2.5-inch 8-round model. Although your 627 is steel and will be a litlle heavier (and a bit less felt recoil) it will likely shoot well. It will be a little beast with full-patch loads (lots of noise, blast, and flash). I actually think its a lot of fun to run magnums through a snub.

You likely would be best served by a set of Hogue grips on it, wooden ones maybe a bit tough on you.

Best of luck and enjoy your new pistol!

shooting4life
12-02-12, 21:54
I enjoy shooting mine. If you want a challenge you can try to find a pre lock version, seen below.
http://i630.photobucket.com/albums/uu30/shooting4life/IMG_3050.jpg

Rosco Benson
12-03-12, 09:27
The .357 cartridge would be better served with a longer barrel. The N-frame "snubbies" that pop up from time to time seem to offer nothing over a 4" version except the illusion of concealability, poorer velocity, and a shorter sight radius. That said, if you dig it, go for it.

Rosco

jh9
12-03-12, 11:20
Looking to buy one, 8 shot, 2.6in bbl.

Anyone own one or have any opinions? Finding them for about $950 currently.

Recently bought a 627 Pro. Only got one match through it, so jury's still out. The pro series ships with a Wolff spring (probably a type-2 by the look of it). I'm reasonably sure the PC guns do the same. You definitely need to test it with all brands of primer you might conceivably use.

I've got two newer frame-mounted firing pin revolvers and neither is reliable with a wolff spring of any stripe. I tried three different wolff Type-1 (aka "factory strength") springs in a 686-5, including two of the newer gray-coated thicker springs, and none of them would light off CCI primers reliably, even with an Apex extended firing pin and a replacement, unmodified strain screw. With the factory spring it will light off anything, and has been doing so as my main IDPA SSR gun for about a decade now. Granted, that particular gun only has about 8k on it, but still.

The wolff spring that shipped with my new 627 pro had one failure to fire with my Federal primer handloads. I suppose it could have been a bum primer. I haven't decided if I'm going to install a factory spring before the next match or just try it again and see.

In contrast, about 10 years ago I sent a 681 (hammer mounted firing pin) to the performance center for an action job, part of which involved installing a wolff type-1 spring. It has never failed to set off a primer.

Wolff has made numerous changes to their S&W revo mainsprings in the last few years to adapt to the "new" FMFP setup. Tread very carefully.

MoCop
12-07-12, 14:54
The .357 cartridge would be better served with a longer barrel. The N-frame "snubbies" that pop up from time to time seem to offer nothing over a 4" version except the illusion of concealability, poorer velocity, and a shorter sight radius. That said, if you dig it, go for it.

Rosco

This is true, but they sure do look sharp.

Dirty dirt
12-08-12, 02:08
Bet that packs a nice kick

HelmandHunter
12-08-12, 20:50
What is the Pre-lock version?

Nevermind, I just educated myself!

CDR_Glock
03-30-13, 23:20
I have a 4" Pro Series and a 5" Performance center 627. They're great revolvers. I do prefer a Hogue Tamer on them since my PC came with a two finger grip. The weight allows the recoil to be very manageable. I do 125 grain 357s with no issue. It is also what I shoot out of a Snubby 357.

However, right now, I'm carrying a S&W Performance Center 586 L-Comp 7 round 357 with a 3" barrel. The L frame is a little easier to carry than an N frame.

oef24
03-30-13, 23:57
I picked one up a few years ago as an impulse buy. The first time out, I tried various ammo and had 50% FTF. Shipped it back to S&W and they took care of it. I haven't shot it much since and it is tough to shoot with the factory stocks.

O

Alaskapopo
03-31-13, 00:00
Looking to buy one, 8 shot, 2.6in bbl.

Anyone own one or have any opinions? Finding them for about $950 currently.

I like the gun just not that short of a barrel on a Nframe. Does not make sense to me as the frame and cylinder are the hardest parts to conceal on that gun.
Pat

FN in MT
04-03-13, 16:36
I've got one of the 627, 8 shot, five inchers, have owned it for two years. The ONLY lock S&W I own.

The current N fames Smiths are probably THE strongest produced so far. They really seem to hold up very well to hot loads. and the accuracy is outstanding!

http://i66.photobucket.com/albums/h274/montanaguy375/IMG_3160_edited-1.jpg

Mine after FIVE hundred rds of .357 mags one afternoon, used by four different shooters.

My only suggestion...get the 4" or 5" barrel.

twistedcomrade
04-03-13, 20:36
My only suggestion...get the 4" or 5" barrel.[/QUOTE]

I agree completely.

sigmundsauer
04-19-13, 15:54
I own several variations of the 27, but my 4-1/8" 627 Pro Series has to be my favorite. I love that magnum! They all shoot great and are incredibly versatile. In fact, I think they are the high water mark for the general purpose .357 magnum revolver.

Tim