I shot my Smith 929 a lot.
And 38 Special SD ammo availability a couple years ago made me go buy a 947. It turned out to be a turd. I was way too heavy to carry for 5 rounds.
But I reload...
I shot my Smith 929 a lot.
And 38 Special SD ammo availability a couple years ago made me go buy a 947. It turned out to be a turd. I was way too heavy to carry for 5 rounds.
But I reload...
You know I like my coffee sweet in the morning
and I'm crazy about my tea at night
thankfully i reload.
With that said, try amoseek.com
miwal and others have reman and steel case for $0.32+ Since you don't reload, why not shoot that steel case . Or the ppu 158gr brass. Even the cci Al case is running $340 per 1K
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"when you're happy you enjoy the melody but, when you're broken you understand the lyrics".
Hmmmm.....the more I think about the 9mm conversion the more interested I get.
Question for the group: If I were to just buy a spare cylinder and have it converted, would it need to be "fitted" to the revolver or are they fairly swappable?
I've always heard (anecdotally) that unlike semi-autos which rely on interchangeable parts, revolvers have to have their parts "fitted" by a gunsmith. Is this true?
Just thinking that a cylinder in 9mm could be the best of both worlds - allow me to keep my S&W revolvers intact, but be able to swap in a 9mm cylinder when I want to shoot 9mm.
The TK conversion doesn't require shipping the whole gun, just the cylinder. Which means no FFL hassles.
EDITED TO ADD: Next question would be: Where can I buy just a cylinder? Does S&W sell them directly to customers or do I need to go through a parts company like Numrich?
Last edited by Martinjmpr; 04-17-2024 at 09:39.
Martin
If you love your freedom, thank a veteran. If you love to party, thank the Beastie Boys. They fought for that right.
As far as I understand it should need to be fitted unless you get lucky and find one that fits already.
Taurus makes a 692 revolver, it has a quick change cylinder system so you in seconds swap from 9mm to 357 cylinders. With just a push of a button. They?re about $550-600 but they are a 686 size revolver.
They also have a 905 which is nearly identical, dimensionally, to a S&W J-Frame. And it costs as much as a TK customs conversion.
I know people turn their nose up to Taurus, but Ruger makes an SP101 and LCR in 9mm as well.
also eBay has a bunch of cylinders.
Last edited by Scanker19; 04-17-2024 at 10:16.
Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Haw haw haw?..
Also the more I think about it the more I wonder how the conversion lets you shoot both?
9mm headspace’s off the case mouth. And 38/357 off the rim. 9mm cylinders have the chamber cut into the cylinder for that reason. So it wouldn’t have the chamber cut into it. It says you MUST use a moon clip to shoot, so now the round is head spacing off the moon clip since it’s now cut deeper to also allow 38/357. The cynical side me wonders if you HAVE to use TK customs moon clips.
But also wider now too, for the 9mm. 9mm technically isn’t a straight walled cartridge, it has a slight taper to it. Which is wider than 357, hence why a 9mm won’t fit in a 357 cylinder unmodified. So I wonder how the 357 cases would look after being fired from a now wider and tapered chamber? And would that cause issues with hot 357 loads?
Last edited by Scanker19; 04-17-2024 at 10:11.
Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Haw haw haw?..
They are! I just picked up a Blackhawk convertible for this very reason.
Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Haw haw haw?..
I think the few guns that have tried to have just a single cylinder have not been very successful. As you indicated, the dimensional requirements promote undesirable case expansion issues. It's kinda like shooting .38 Special in the .38 S&W Commonwealth Victory Revolvers that had their cylinder chambers reamed-out in the pre-'68 era- it works, kinda...
Last edited by .455_Hunter; 04-17-2024 at 10:33.
The vagrants of Boulder welcome you...
Dad's wholesale off washington and 62nd used to have good reloads at a decent price. I used to buy ammo from him all the time. it was a bit dirty but never had a reliability issue. Great for range plinking.
EBR - Embrace the Darkness!
TKs conversions are awesome and worth every penny.
However they require moon clips for 9mm which you need to factor into your budget.
You know I like my coffee sweet in the morning
and I'm crazy about my tea at night