I guess I buck a lot of the pocket carry trends, inasmuch as I carry an older S&W Model 60 with the pinned barrel, firing pin on the hammer, and service grips. (Pictures
here and
here; I've added a Tyler grip adaptor since these photos were taken.)
Yes, it's a revolver with an exposed hammer weighing around 23 oz. fully loaded with holster. The opinions expressed in this thread seem to paint that as the antithesis of the pocket gun, but I think a lot of people are missing out. Although the cylinder on revolvers makes the widest point much wider than many pocket autos, if the width is averaged over the length and height of hte gun, they come out to be far thinner on the whole. The smaller grips and more rounded countours make snubbies disappear far more readily in the pocket. I was expecting to have to put up with the weight increase, but the fact that snubbies have most of their weight in the cylinder, not the grips, causes the gun to balance along the front seam of the pocket, minimizing flop and making it feel lighter. But at the range, that extra weight makes the gun a joy to shoot. (A good thing, too, since learning to shoot a snub accurately is going to take some practice.) And the hammer? An Uncle Mike's sidekick keeps it covered while in the pocket, and the way I draw it keeps the spur well clear of the seams even if I forget to cover it with my thumb.
Naturally, all of the above is one man's (long-winded) opinion. I love threads like these because it's always interesting to learn what others are carrying and why.