Riomouse911
Member
As the guys said above, for the right amount of $$ just about anything is possible. As for practical, I guess that’s determined by how deep your pockets are.
The firing of .38 Special in .357 revolvers like your 686 is perfectly fine, if that’s what you shoot in it fire away with confidence. If you reload, loading .38 Special powered loads in .357 cases is an option, as are “mid level” .357 loads that are a bit more stout than the Specials but not as abusing as full house magnum loads. There are a few pluses of shooting the magnum cases in the magnum chamber of the 686; the bullet has a bit less jump to the forcing cone which may help accuracy ( I personally don’t shoot well enough to tell if that’s true), you only need one case and there is little adjusting of your reloading set up, and the longer case doesn’t leave the ring in the chambers that the shorter .38 cases can leave after a long day of shooting.
The big, heavy L frame S&W .357 will soak up the recoil of .38 loads and it will give decades of service doing so.
As for K frames and .38 Specials, there is something extra fun about shooting .38 loads through those guns. Maybe it’s all in my head, but the smaller/lighter frame and non-lugged barrels really do fit together perfectly with the round itself. I have several .38 Special-chambered K frame S&W’s (Pre 10 M&P, 14(3),15, 64 & 67) and a Colt Officers Model Heavy Barrel that receive a lot of my attention at the range. My favorite .38 load of 4.5 gr Unique and a 158 gr SWC shoots well in all of them.
In my .357’s, of which I also have several (S&W 13,19, 65, 66(2) K frames, Ruger GP-100, Dan Wesson 15-2(2 w/5 barrels) and an L frame 686+ 7-shot) I bump the Unique charge up to 6 gr and it is wonderfully accurate and very easy shooting.
Whatever you choose to do is the right answer, as there is no wrong one. I will say if you do get a custom .38 cylinder for your 686, please take some pictures and let us know how it shoots!
Stay safe.
The firing of .38 Special in .357 revolvers like your 686 is perfectly fine, if that’s what you shoot in it fire away with confidence. If you reload, loading .38 Special powered loads in .357 cases is an option, as are “mid level” .357 loads that are a bit more stout than the Specials but not as abusing as full house magnum loads. There are a few pluses of shooting the magnum cases in the magnum chamber of the 686; the bullet has a bit less jump to the forcing cone which may help accuracy ( I personally don’t shoot well enough to tell if that’s true), you only need one case and there is little adjusting of your reloading set up, and the longer case doesn’t leave the ring in the chambers that the shorter .38 cases can leave after a long day of shooting.
The big, heavy L frame S&W .357 will soak up the recoil of .38 loads and it will give decades of service doing so.
As for K frames and .38 Specials, there is something extra fun about shooting .38 loads through those guns. Maybe it’s all in my head, but the smaller/lighter frame and non-lugged barrels really do fit together perfectly with the round itself. I have several .38 Special-chambered K frame S&W’s (Pre 10 M&P, 14(3),15, 64 & 67) and a Colt Officers Model Heavy Barrel that receive a lot of my attention at the range. My favorite .38 load of 4.5 gr Unique and a 158 gr SWC shoots well in all of them.

In my .357’s, of which I also have several (S&W 13,19, 65, 66(2) K frames, Ruger GP-100, Dan Wesson 15-2(2 w/5 barrels) and an L frame 686+ 7-shot) I bump the Unique charge up to 6 gr and it is wonderfully accurate and very easy shooting.
Whatever you choose to do is the right answer, as there is no wrong one. I will say if you do get a custom .38 cylinder for your 686, please take some pictures and let us know how it shoots!
Stay safe.