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The Off Duty: .38 Special (similar to the Undercover but with a bobbed hammer and weighing 12 oz (340 g)) The Dixie Derringer: .22 LR and .22 Magnum; The Pitbull: 9×19mm Luger, .40 S&W, and .45 ACP (same frame as Bulldog and Pug) The Southpaw: .38 Special (similar to Undercover, but made for left-handed shooters) [6]
Smith & Wesson M&P in .38 Special produced in 1899 A .38 Special Jacketed Soft Point round Air Force issue Smith & Wesson Model 15-4 in .38 Special In 1930, Smith & Wesson introduced a large-frame 38 Special revolver with a 5-inch barrel and fixed sights intended for police use, the Smith & Wesson 38/44 Heavy Duty .
Pages in category ".38 Special firearms" The following 48 pages are in this category, out of 48 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Armscor M200;
Older production Charter Arms Bulldog in .44 Special Like most Charter Arms weapons, the Bulldog is a relatively inexpensive yet serviceable, no-frills, [ 5 ] snubnosed revolver . [ 10 ] It was designed to be concealed easily because of its small size, yet also fire a "big bore" caliber. [ 10 ]
The .38-44 Heavy Duty was purely and completely a plain-Jane fixed-sight police service revolver (and the 5" barrel version was in the 1930 catalog as the "Super Police" model), with square notch rear sight milled into the topstrap of the frame and semicircular "half nickel" front sight pinned to a base atop the muzzle; every Heavy Duty model I ...
The result was the K-38 Combat Masterpiece. The major distinction between the K-38 Target Masterpiece and the K-38 Combat Masterpiece is the barrel length and the front sight. [2] In 1957, the K-38 Combat Masterpiece was renamed the Model 15 when all Smith & Wesson revolvers were given numerical model numbers.
Image credits: historycoolkids The History Cool Kids Instagram account has amassed an impressive 1.5 million followers since its creation in 2016. But the page’s success will come as no surprise ...
The .38 Long Colt's predecessor, the .38 Short Colt, used a heeled bullet of 130 grains (8.4 g) at a nominal 770 ft/s (230 m/s), producing 165 ft⋅lbf (224 J) muzzle energy. The cylindrical "shank" or "bearing surface" of the bullet, just in front of the cartridge case mouth, was .374 or .375 in (9.50 or 9.53 mm) in diameter, the same as the ...