I did ask as to at what point do these delays constitute theft of my property.When they were telling your they didn't know where it was; "Should I call the ATF and tell them you lost it? I think I'm required to..."
I did ask as to at what point do these delays constitute theft of my property.When they were telling your they didn't know where it was; "Should I call the ATF and tell them you lost it? I think I'm required to..."
And speed loaders can help with that. A lost skill that is making a comebackJust remember you have 6 well placed shots.
7 shotsJust remember you have 6 well placed shots.
MoonclipsAnd speed loaders can help with that. A lost skill that is making a comeback
That’s some fine 10 yrd. Shooting. Now step it back to 25yrds. And watch what those L-comp revolves are really known for.Now it is time for a LOOOOONG overdue range report. Holy Frjioles is this ever overdue!
I had a very bad attitude brewing as I headed to the range for a test firing after finally getting this thing back. I purchased a 50 round box of Armscor 158gr FMJ .357 Magnums and a 50 round box of PMC 132gr .38 Special FMJ for test firing, didn't want use up any of those nice Remington SJHPs if it wasn't going to work right.
And I must say it functioned so well that in tge end, so far it was worth the ordeal, bad attitude totally lifted! It fired off every round with nary a hiccup. In fact I have finally experienced the true joy of revolvers:
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I'm not even a revolver guy but I think that is pretty decent nevertheless. Both groups were shot double action, I intend to mostly shoot in DA as that is what a modern revolver is designed for.
Impressions: the 586 L Comp is a very fine shooting piece with a very smooth and even trigger, single action pulls feel like mouse clicks, double action is very smooth and it easy to keep the gun steady as you work through it.
The black on black post in notch sight picture wasn't especially brilliant but was adequate and the front post is a little on the finer side which I prefer, I honestly don't see a great need to replace them at thus point. The sights were perfectly regulated out of the box too, tge .357s were dead nuts on and the .38s hit just slightly low so maybe I'll adjust the sights for a 6 o'clock hold in the future.
Recoil......... what recoil? The .38s felt like .22s and the .357s felt like 9mms out of a Glock 19 to me. The Armscor loads are rated @ 1350 fps so a proper full house load but felt like nothing out of this gun regardless.
All in all I enjoyed shooting the L-Comp immensely and I can certainly see why revolver shooters are so devoted to the type.
I will now go ahead and shop for a decent holster and look into getting those VZ black cherry G10 grips. The Houge Bantam grip felt perfectly fine, they just lack the sexiness I'm looking for.
I might even purchase further S&W products this range session worked out so well.
Thank God for that!
Thanks! I'm just getting started with it and I intend to get better yet. I have that other 200 rounds to go through this weekend and no I am doing all kinds of mental maths to figure out on how to get much larger quantities of 357 as soon as possible.That’s some fine 10 yrd. Shooting. Now step it back to 25yrds. And watch what those L-comp revolves are really known for.
Indeed. Revolvers do seem to be more fun to shoot for some reason. Another pdd thing I noticed was that when I shot my 5 shot 340 I was always taken by how fast 5 rounds went, It didn't feel like enough like thw fun eneded too soon.P.S. Happy to hear all turned out well. There’s nothing like a well tuned revolver for maximum range time FUN!
You kidding me? I'm typing this with my phone in my left hand while I'm dry firing the L-Comp in my right. When I woke up today I grabbed the L-Comp of the bedside table and click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click-click.................I think I might be autistic.Your gun will eat a shit ton of 357 before you even think about wearing it out, but it would eat even more 38.
Dry firing is a great way to do some trigger exercises without burning through ammo. Try pulling the trigger until the cylinder turns and locks, but before the hammer drops. If you keep doing that while you're watching TV at night, you will develop excellent trigger control.
38 & 357 is probably the easiest cartridge to load for, so consider saving the brass.
I wouldn’t give up on it so fast. The L-comp revolvers have been around for close to 10 yrs. I’ve seen them on the secondary market many times.Nice looking and sounds like a smooth operator, guess I won't find one of those in the oldies case.
Robin
You mentioned the 340PD a couple times: If you're used to shooting .357mag out of that little fucker, then damn near anything else will seem like "shooting a .22 or 9mm"200 rounds of Remington 125 gr .357 Mag SJHPs and tge best group of the day, @ 20 yards:
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Those Remingtons must be significantly more spicy than the Amscors regardless of what tte boxes say as recoil was significantly more than any 9, 40 , or .45 I have ever shot. Nevertheless still entirely comfortable. Even after 200 rounds and the S&W running burning hot I was still hungry for more. Alas .357 is expensive.
Most of my fire was in DA, as was that group, and I think I'm getting the hang of it. Working with a DA revolver is extremely rewarding and fun!
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I wouldn't at all say that I am "used to" shooting 357s out of the 340. I shot a 50 round box of .357s on it's inaugural range trip and a cylinder's worth once since. I mostly shoot .38s out of it, indeed .38 Special +Ps are what I carry in it. While I didn't find .357 recoil from the 340PD to be brutally painful as some have claimed I do find it particularly unpleasant and I have a hard time getting tge magnums to print anything that looks like a group from it. With the .38 +P Golden Sabers however I can get a fairly tight group @10 yards. I have 200 rounds of MagTech .38s lying around, I should put them through the little S&W next range trip I take. I do think it is an entertaining little piece.You mentioned the 340PD a couple times: If you're used to shooting .357mag out of that little fucker, then damn near anything else will seem like "shooting a .22 or 9mm"
Good question... having replaced a few missing fiber strands on front sights (mostly muzzle loaders) the filament isn't very strong, and after inserting it you heat the blade of a screwdriver and melt the end just a dab to keep it from sliding out...it'd have to get pretty hot, and the gasses from the port might just do it...you're going to find out.Something just occurred to me: would tge blast off that compensator melt a fiber optic front sight?
Good question and sadly one that I can’t answer. I don’t think that I can recall ever reading on any of the various sites that I’m on anyone ever installing a fiber optic site on a ported revolver .Something just occurred to me: would tge blast off that compensator melt a fiber optic front sight?