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Colt agent 38 special hammer
Colt agent 38 special hammer














embarked on developing the LCR, the company took everything, aside from the dynamics of a revolver’s operation, and tossed it out the window. Ruger LCR Modern technology has given the LCR a better grip, far more manageable recoil and better overall handling.Īt the point in time when Sturm, Ruger & Co. Being a traditional double-action/single-action revolver, the Agent was a good deal more accurate with the hammer cocked, but never as easy to handle as the Detective Special. In overall length, the pocket-friendly Colt six-shooter measured 6.5 inches, 4.25 inches in height and had a cylinder 1.25 inches in width. The Agent weighed a mere 14 ounces and, like the rest of the line, carried six rounds over a comparable Smith & Wesson revolver’s five. The original version was manufactured from 1962 to 1972. 38 Special cartridges but not exactly pleasant on the shooting range after about 50 rounds. It was accurate enough at close range with then-current. The shorter grip made the gun easier to conceal but harder to control than the standard Detective Special or Cobra models. A high-cut triggerguard helped but punished the shooter’s middle finger unless the Agent was properly held.

colt agent 38 special hammer

The Agent was essentially a Detective Special built for more covert carry with a shorter, 2.5-inch, finely checkered, square-butt, walnut grip that barely allowed enough depth for the second and third fingers to grasp it. The Detective Special originally had a square-butt grip, but in 1933 it was rounded off. RELATED STORY: Concealed Carry Comparison – Ruger LCP Custom vs. Two years later it would become a separate model, the Detective Special, a handgun that remained in production in its pre-war form from 1927 to 1946, and in slightly modified post-war second, third and fourth issues from 1947 to 1995. Note how the grips overlap the frame.īack in 1926, Colt offered a 2-inch-barreled version of the Police Positive called the Special. With this in mind, let’s see how this new-tech, polymer-framed five-shooter stacks up against old-school, all-metal standard-bearers like Colt’s Agent, the smallest of the famed Detective Special-based wheelguns.Ĭolt Agent The Agent’s short grip frame made it a highly concealable undercover revolver. 38 Specials available today, with the technology leader being the Ruger LCR. But S&W is only one among a vast field of small-frame.

Colt agent 38 special hammer full#

The Colts, however, are long gone and have become collectible, while S&W has continued to advance the technology and produce a full line of compact revolvers. The much older Colts held a one-round advantage with their sixgun cylinders.įast-forward to the 21st century and snub-nose revolvers are still around, which is an impressive fact in itself.

colt agent 38 special hammer

The S&Ws, however, which all came about in the 1950s, were built on the S&W J-Frame and were five-shot repeaters. The second choice in concealed-carry wheelguns was the Smith & Wesson Chief’s Special and Chief’s Special Airweight (later the Model 36 and Model 37), the Bodyguard Airweight (later the Model 38), and the very slick hammerless Centennial and Centennial Airweights (later the Model 40 and Model 42). The first was the Colt Detective Special, introduced in 1927 (also later the c.1934 Banker’s Special, the very sharp looking 1950s Cobra, followed by the smaller-gripped c.1960s Colt Agent). When one chose to carry a small, self-defense pistol back in the 1950s, the variety of “top of the line” handguns gave you two excellent.














Colt agent 38 special hammer