I havent kept up with this thread well, will there be blued ones coming out?
I havent kept up with this thread well, will there be blued ones coming out?
“Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
What vintage is your JMCK? The reason I ask is the holster I got for my GP100 WC, early 2021 vintage, the Python barrel spreads the holster so nothing else make contact. I think I read where JMCK changed types molds. I am also wondering if the WC mold is different. Just gathering information before I email Tony. I highly agree with #3 and 4 too.
Working with https://vintagegunleathertoday.com/ we determined that any closed toe holsters would most likely not work due to the .25 inch required by the Canadians to not be evil. Keep that in mind if having one built, other than that it should be no problem.
More church & failure drill work, this time at 25 yards. Full power .357 from the holster, DA, under 3 seconds par for the single churches, and 3 seconds from low ready with .38 spl for the failure drills. (I can assure you the “interesting” dental grouping was not intentional).
Mind you the 4/6 performance is not acceptable, but pretty typical.
It has taken me a while to get to this point, with lots of dry fire on snap caps and skip loading drills.
I have a feeling that it will take continuous effort to support this sort of thing for me, but it has been fun and educational. I can see the positive results of taming the DA and refining my grip when running my other pistols.
I'm beginning to see new Pythons going for MSRP on GB.
It has always been possible to get one for MSRP if one is patient and smart about where they shop. I am not necessarily either of those, but paid below MSRP on one (even after tax and transfer fee) and right at that number for another.
Mind you, MSRP used to be the number the manufacturer would put out there so that you would feel like you got a deal on street prices that were 5 to 15% less… not what one would expect to pay, in the Before Times.
I’m just happy to see mainline ammo calibers getting down to something a bit less painful- but still far from, say, 2017.
@Archer1420
Are these both (post 628) 4.25" or is one a 6"? Struggling with the angle & a latter post (644) also looks like a 6" to my eyes. Thanks.
The easy way to spot the difference in a Python between 4.25 (or original 4) and 6 is the number of vents in the top rib. 4’s have two, while 6’s have three.
Both are 4.25”.