It's a standard Colt Police Positive; however it's chambered in .38 S&W rather than the ubiquitous .38 special. It also appears to be LNIB. Which is interesting, given that the serial number places its date of manufacture to sometime in the 1920s...
I just loves me the old wheelguns. One of these days I'm going to scrounge up a box of .38 S&W and see how she shoots. If it's anything like, oh, every other Colt in the armory, I'll be in for a treat...
6 comments:
Dude... do NOT go to a major chain for that ammo! The local Gander Mtn tried selling me .38 spl (oh, it's the same stuff!). Anticipating such problems, I had brought the cylinder from my Enfield with me...
I still have a couple boxes lying around, and am working on getting dies. Let me know if you need help... ;)
strings,
You must be forgetting that I'm in Massa-fucking-chusetts. What you call "major chain" stores don't exist around here - no Cabellas, no Gander Mountain, heck, not even a Bass Pro.
I guess you could count Dick's, if you want a sporting goods store with a little bit of hunting stuff tossed in the back...
Fortunately, .38 special will NOT load in a .38 S&W chambered revolver (much like .357 Magnum will not load in a .38 special).
That's why I had the cylinder with me: told Mr "There're the same as .38spl" to snag a box, and hand me a round. Dropped it in the cylinder, and WOW!: it didn't drop all the way in...
Found a couple boxes at a local hole-in-the-wall, later that day...
I wound up reloading for this cartridge. I found that using bullets from a .38 Spl mold 'as cast', don't size and lube with Lee Liquid Alox, works beautifully.
Also, Lyman makes a mold for a 200-grain round-nose bullet that lets you duplicate the old 200-grain 'police' load. Also the Brit .380/200 for the Webley(which is what I'm loading for).
firehand,
Reloading is in my future, but in the distant future. I need to clean out my attic, then get it wired, then finish it off first.
Estimated time to completion: About as long as it takes my kids to graduate high school (they're 4 and 6)...
Mine was made in 1923, and looks like it's only a few years old.
Get an old Winchester mold in .38 S&W for it - works great. Makes those nice, old orginal style bullets. I bought a couple boxes of Winchester Super-X cartridges to shoot and reload, which have nickel-plated cases. Lee makes .38 S&W dies.
The Colt PP in .38 S&W, or as Colt would have called it, .38 Colt New Police, is a really neat, compact .38. It's very diminutive compared to my S&W 64, .38 Special, which seems oversized by comparison.
It's a very fine, little gun, but still a .38 six-shooter.
Post a Comment