Look in the “other model” filter in Smith revolvers.
https://www.gunbroker.com/item/1036576549
Printable View
Look in the “other model” filter in Smith revolvers.
https://www.gunbroker.com/item/1036576549
nice
$75 to ship though
Thank you for posting, but I did not see much information about the condition of the gun, and the terms of sale are as is - no returns.
I’d be tempted to roll the dice on one of these if I didn’t pick up a nice clean 64-3 local last April for $320
Seller's page with all their 64s: https://www.gunbroker.com/All/search...20%26%20Wesson
Most of their 64-5s are mislabeled 64-4s. I'm pretty sure that -6 is actually a -5. So I guess 2 total. Of the two actual 64-5s this one looks the most interesting: https://www.gunbroker.com/item/1036247136
There was a period around when that gun was made (CDK prefix, so I think 1999 or 2000) that S&W stainless cylinders showed cylinder stop notch wear early. Cosmetic, and the notch deformation would work-harden and then behave normally. Something to do, I think, with the cylinders being heat treated on the harder side of "in-spec"? Seeing guns from that time period with little to no notch wear means if they have been fired, it's very, very little. Even less than you'd normally estimate based on "normal" stop notch wear.
This is what that stop notch would look like with ~8k on the clock (pics from one of my IDPA guns made the same year):
Attachment 115287
Attachment 115288
Attachment 115289
$275 + $75 shipping + the cost of a deep clean. (IDK, strip & dump it in an ultrasonic cleaner?) That gets you a pre-lock K-frame that can be serviced with current production parts. Though without inspection it's hard to tell how many of those current production parts (if any) would be needed to get it up to snuff.
Huge fan of those late 90s Tomkins-era guns.
They look... gritty
I bought one about a year ago from a different batch, and it was fine mechanically. Trigger was decent, not special. It had a set of Pachmayr's on it.
I polished the action and swapped springs, added a set of Ahrends. It's a decent practice gun without a lot of money in it.