Monday, November 26, 2007
Sunday Smith #24: Model 10-8, 1983
The Smith & Wesson Model 10 was available in standard barrel lengths of two, four, five, and six inches for most of its life, but early on Smith offered a three-inch tube as a special order item, usually for large departmental orders. The 3" square butt configuration was popular with many foreign police departments, being used from France and Turkey to Malaysia and Australia. It was only when combined with the round-butt frame of the 2" Model 10, however, that the three-inch barrel really came into its own.
By the early 1980s, the 3" round-butt Model 10 had become a regular catalog offering, and some people immediately recognized the virtues offered by this package. The 3" barrel and round butt made the gun compact enough to be discreetly carried on the belt. Unlike its 2" snubbie cousin, though, the 3" barrel offered usable sight radius and even more importantly it had a full-length ejector rod stroke to ensure positive extraction of spent cases. The steel frame and thick barrel profile made the gun heavy enough to easily tame the recoil of even hot +P ammunition, while not rendering it too heavy to comfortably carry. The fixed sights were rugged and snag-free, and added to the all-business aura of the piece.
Domestic agencies, including the Criminal Investigative Division of the much-loved IRS, quickly saw the virtues of this configuration, and the FBI issued its .357 Magnum sibling, the Model 13. Many fans today still consider this the best all-around concealed-carry revolver configuration.
In 1997, Smith finally discontinued all configurations except the 4" heavy barrel, and the Model 10 lingers on mostly for bulk orders to private security firms. The above pictured revolver, a Model 10-8 produced in 1983, was purchased for $275 back in '03, which was a pretty fair price for a 95% gun with the box, docs, and tools. Cleaned up and sold at auction today, it could bring as much as $350-375, given its configuration, condition, and correct accoutrement.
Note, too that a 3" HB points about as well as a 6" skinny-barrel; you can feel where it's pointing.
ReplyDeleteFor my money, there's no better totin' iron on the planet than a three-inch heavy-barreled K.
ReplyDeleteEverything you need, and nothing you don't.
I can't wait to pick up my Model 65. Maybe I won't get all stupid and sell this one.
ReplyDeleteMy carry gun is a 3" M-65. I went with that after first reading about that config over at THR. I love the gun and have confidence in it.
ReplyDeleteI have a 3" 13 and it is one of the Greatest, I also like my round butt 4" standard barrel 65.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I've put all of a handful of rounds through my ULTIMATE!!1111 Super HB FrankNFAL that I sold so many guns to buy. I would've carried that 3" 65 most days. Damn.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, when I finally make it back up to Statesboro, I'll have one again.
i own 1 of these smith models, the barrel is not pinned, do any of them have pinned barrels?
ReplyDeleteThose made before ~1982 should have pinned barrels.
ReplyDelete