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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
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    Bay area, Calif
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    Default Please tell me how this works ...

    On Auction Arms is a beautiful S&w revolver with 5" barrel.
    It's chambered for 38 S&W. It's a top break, Plus, it has
    the usual thumb latch which I assume is to swing out the
    cylinder. So how does that work on a top break ?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    S.E. Arizona
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    Default It does look odd...

    Quote Originally Posted by dogtag View Post
    On Auction Arms is a beautiful S&w revolver with 5" barrel.
    It's chambered for 38 S&W. It's a top break, Plus, it has
    the usual thumb latch which I assume is to swing out the
    cylinder. So how does that work on a top break ?
    but it does work. The earlier S&W topbreak revolvers have a round-ended stud to serve as the pivot point at the center-rear of the cylinder which is fixed, and requires a tapered 'ramp' in the frame to permit closing and opening of the breech.
    This stud is not solidly supported in the frame when closed, so can permit the cylinder to be mis-aligned with the barrel due to wear, dirt or mechanical damage.
    The break-open frame with thumb latch was an attempt to alleviate the problem: the revolver has the same spring-loaded plunger-type pivot point/axle at the rear of the cylinder as the later side-swing cylinder models, which enters a corresponding pivot hole in the standing breech, and the latch is required to press the plunger forward when opening the revolver, just as in those newer types. In closing the revolver, the plunger is simply pressed forward by contact with the frame.
    Apparently not too many of this type were made, and the last of the S&W top break revolvers in the line (the Safety Hammerless) was made without it until production ended, while the side-swing types still employ the same basic design.

    mhb - Mike
    Sancho! My armor!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
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    Default

    Good Heavens ! It's no wonder only a few were made.
    Thanks for the explanation which I did not understand.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
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    S.E. Arizona
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    Default O.K. ...

    Quote Originally Posted by dogtag View Post
    Good Heavens ! It's no wonder only a few were made.
    Thanks for the explanation which I did not understand.
    just google 'S&W Perfected Model' - I think you will find all the information you can use.

    mhb - Mike
    Sancho! My armor!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Jackson, Mississippi
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    Default

    I'd never heard of one of these before. Thanks Dogtag, thanks Mike.

    Dogtag,

    It takes two operations to open the action.

    To open a Perfected for loading, you have to lift the conventional top-break barrel catch, then in addition, you must push the thumbpiece (like modern S&W revolvers) to release a center-pin lock, very similar to the lock used on revolvers with side-swing cylinders.
    http://www.gun-tests.com/special_rep...l#.VV9NBSHBzGc
    Phillip McGregor (OFC)
    "I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthur

  6. #6

    Default

    If you think thats odd, you should see my Merwin & Hulberts!
    Loaded like any S&W, BUT to unload, a lever on the frame is disengaged, the barrel is then twisted 90 degrees and then pulled forward, The ejector is fixed and the cylinder is then pulled off the empties!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Guanacaste
    Posts
    718

    Default

    Then imagine this little nightmare. It might have the shortest service of any British sidearm. The military gleefully sent these to the RCMP where it continued to maim and kill more Mounties than bad guys.






    I think I tried to trade it to John twenty years ago for a fair Webley .38/200 tanker. I can still read the hilarity behind his simple, "NO thank you."
    "Own only what you can carry with you; know language, know countries,
    know people. Let your memory be your travel bag."

    - Alexander Solzhenitsyn

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