My First Revolver


PDA






Pietro Beretta
July 21, 2009, 09:50 PM
Well: my dad is "retired" and handicapped. He needed a little extra money, so we talked and I ended up buying his S&W model 60 .357 Magnum 5" barrel. He bought it about 4 years back and only fired it a total of 6 times.

Can you believe my own father charged me a tad more than FULL price at $600:what:

It did have Crimson Trace Grips on, which I promptly took off. (Those will be up for sale soon enough.) (who knew my dad is such a wussy; Laser Grips!:p )

Anyway, I never have owned a revolver, is there anything anyone would want to warn me about or suggest; since I've been a semi-auto only guy?

If you enjoyed reading about "My First Revolver" here in TheHighRoad.org archive, you'll LOVE our community. Come join TheHighRoad.org today for the full version!
Resto Guy
July 21, 2009, 10:19 PM
Warning - revolvers are addictive.

david_the_greek
July 21, 2009, 10:46 PM
I have to agree with Resto. I am 22 years old, playing mall ninja is the standard M.O. for people my age. I have my nice Kimber 1911, my high cap cz pcr (well, 14rnds used to be high cap...), my S&W mp15 with a surefire rail and foregrip light.... and after taking my cpl course I picked up a revolver. Since then, the lights have come off the AR, the revolver gets most of my attention, and today on a whim I picked up an old S&W model 36, despite having an AR project in the works for 2 months and the extreme desire to buy a compact 1911.

I never thought I'd like revolvers, nor did I think they were practical in this day of high cap/tiny auto loaders. Boy was I wrong....


*On a note, I actually bought a slew of nice WWII guns BEFORE any of the shmancy new tacticool stuff!, I'm not completely classless! ;-)

bflobill_69
July 22, 2009, 12:56 PM
Absolutely addicting... nothing wrong with a good auto, but revolvers just "Feel" right!

Bflobill

oneounceload
July 22, 2009, 01:09 PM
I would suggest doing lots of practicing on your trigger pull - both single and double action - odds are it will be like nothing you've ever shot before. If you reload, I would get dies and components - 38/357 is tough to find at the moment, and expensive when you do. Revolvers can be difficult for most to master the grip immediately - you might want to think about installing a Tyler T grip (use google to find). Personally, I would start with 38's - cheaper and less painful to your hand than a 357. Don't forget to get the proper cleaning equipment as well.

Fumbler
July 22, 2009, 04:00 PM
He needed a little extra money....Can you believe my own father charged me a tad more than FULL price at $600
Just think of it like this; you gave him $300 for the gun and you also gave him $300 because he's your dad and needed some money.
That solves the problem because you got a great deal on a model 60 and you're a great son for giving him some pocket cash ;)

Anyway, I never have owned a revolver, is there anything anyone would want to warn me about or suggest; since I've been a semi-auto only guy?
-Don't slam the cylinder closed
-Don't worry about carbon rings around the cylinder
-Don't overlube it
-Go have fun with it. The model 60 is a great gun.

pharmer
July 22, 2009, 05:38 PM
You're a good son for kicking your dad a bone. Max karma points award. Joe

Pietro Beretta
July 22, 2009, 08:38 PM
-Don't slam the cylinder closed
-Don't worry about carbon rings around the cylinder
-Don't overlube it
-Go have fun with it. The model 60 is a great gun.

Thanks for that
:)

C-grunt
July 22, 2009, 11:39 PM
Dont shoot straight thumbs like that one guy did and blow your thumb off.

Revovlers are excellent weapons. Im also fairly young at 25 and much prefer a nice revolver. There's just something classic and simple about them. Plus they tend to very very accurate.

BamaHoosier
July 24, 2009, 11:25 PM
My first wheelie was a Ruger Security-Six .357Mag back in 1983.Currently,I have a Charter Arms Off-Duty .38SP and a S&W Mod.66.Both are snubbies.The former has Pachmayer(sp?)grips and the latter has factory wood finger-grooved grips.Someday,when I learn how to post pics,I'll show 'em on here:D

ArchAngelCD
July 27, 2009, 02:45 AM
Can you believe my own father charged me a tad more than FULL price at $600
The MSRP for a M60 is now up to $830 but the street price for a 5" M60 is $599 (http://www.budsgunshop.com/catalog/product_info.php/manufacturers_id/31/products_id/15068). Add another $200 or so for the laser grips and I would say you got a very good deal on a revolver that was only fired "a total of 6 times."

I'm a revolver guy myself and I would say you bought a good revolver. I have only 4 J frames but I don't have a M60. I do however have a M36 of 1975 vintage that is probably my favorite J frame that I own.

Oh, one other thing about that M60 and this thread ....

http://i116.photobucket.com/albums/o26/ArchAngelCD/worthlessthread.gif

frankiestoys
July 27, 2009, 08:10 AM
No doubt auto's are cool, but revolvers are my favorite. I don't think there's anything better looking then a wheelgun. The problem is, you just can;t have one.

kle
July 27, 2009, 02:06 PM
No doubt auto's are cool, but revolvers are my favorite. I don't think there's anything better looking then a wheelgun. The problem is, you just can;t have one.

Too bad conversion kits for revolvers are impractical. My 'conversion kits' for my revolvers are...other revolvers =)

Beagle-zebub
July 27, 2009, 05:13 PM
Well, certain Blackhawks and Dan Wessons convert in some manner, right?

kle
July 27, 2009, 05:46 PM
Well, certain Blackhawks and Dan Wessons convert in some manner, right?

Sure, but just between similar calibers--in the case of the Ruger Blackhawks, it's .357 Magnum <-> 9mm, and .45 Colt <-> .45ACP. In the case of the Dan Wessons, I'm not totally sure...barrels of different lengths can be swapped pretty easily, but I don't know about changing calibers.

If you enjoyed reading about "My First Revolver" here in TheHighRoad.org archive, you'll LOVE our community. Come join TheHighRoad.org today for the full version!