I have a chance to get a M60-9 in 357. Can anybody give me some general info on this model. I know that most model 60's are in 38. How does it hold up in 357 and are there any problems inherant to the 60-9.
Thanks
Jason:cool:
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Ala Dan
April 14, 2004, 12:00 AM
Greeting's From The "Deep South"-
Your S&W 60-9 .357 magnum should perform just
fine. I haven't heard of any bad 60's in .38 caliber,
or .357 magnum. I have an older model 60, in .38
Special and know several persons with the 60's
in .357 magnum; all are currently functioning very
well.
Best Wishes,
Ala Dan, N.R.A. Life Member
Marshall
April 14, 2004, 12:24 AM
Howdy KFD147,
I just bought one about 3-4 weeks ago, I probably have 75-80 rounds of .38 through it and 40-50 rounds of 357. It performed flawlessly and had nothing loose when I finished. I have the 2 1/8" model and was pleasantly surprised with it's accuracy. A gentleman at the range told me they were little tack drivers, I thought "yea right". As it turns out, he knew better than I. The little things a keeper.
Standing Wolf
April 14, 2004, 12:54 AM
My primary carry gun is a pre-agreement model 60. I assumed before I bought it the gun would be only marginally accurate and uncomfortable to shoot with full house loads.
I was rock-solid wrong on both counts. It's not a match pistol, no, but surprisingly accurate out to 25 yards. The factory original black rubber grips were ugly, ugly, ugly, and didn't absorb recoil very well, so I replaced them with a set of Badger laminated wood stocks. They fit my hand much better, accommodate my least finger, and give me a surer grip—and absorb recoil reasonably well.
It's by no means a gun I'd enjoy putting several hundred rounds of factory ammunition through without a break, but it's not significantly more uncomfortable to shoot than a snub-nosed K frame. I'd guess I've run 1,000 rounds through it, both full house and light-loaded target ammunition, and haven't encountered a single problem.
KFD147
April 15, 2004, 08:34 PM
Thanks to everybody that replied. I went out and bought it for $245 out the door. I plan on shooting it this weekend. The only other j frame that I have is a Ruger SP-101 9mm and I really wanted a S&W 357 j frame, but was not sure how they hold up. I have 6 K frame pistols in 38/357 and they are sometimes uncomfortable to carry, so I switch back between Colt, Smith and Rugar. It depends on what I wear.
Thanks
Jason:cool:
Standing Wolf
April 15, 2004, 09:51 PM
The only other j frame that I have is a Ruger SP-101 9mm...
Sorry, but the J frame is exclusive to Smith & Wesson.
You got a great price.
KFD147
April 15, 2004, 10:05 PM
:D OK! OK!:rolleyes: Small like the Smith j frame.:p
Jason:cool:
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