Post
by airguns » Sat Apr 02, 2011 9:27 pm
As Capt. Sharma and others have pointed out, look for condition first. 95%+ Arms you will essentially find in two conditions, unrepaired arms in good working condition and those that have been butchered by gunsmiths and carry unknown internals. NIB means nothing. So forget external cosmetics and look for a unrepaired piece in good working condition.
Best bet would be a Smith 31 or a genuine Webley (heavy though and many counterfeits floating around). Colts are harder to find, as they stopped making the Detective Special .32, 2nd series around 197X (few were imported seems most people were fans of Webley in the old days and only imported Smiths when the Webley ceased production). I got my licence in 2008, 6 months of searching, only saw one nickel plated Colt in good condition, ran into several good Smiths, Webleys, H&R and Arminus. In 2008, I was quoted prices starting at 1.5 for Arminus to all the way around 4-6 for Smiths. Have to be higher these days.
Getting a new IOF revolver (if you don't mind keeping it for the factory delivery no-sale period) and having a competent gunsmith rework it is another option and should not be overlooked. There is no denying that as delivered from SAF, it is rough and poorly finished. Most of it's defects can be rectified. It essentially needs, light stoning of internals, maybe a spring change, to improve the mechanism (smooth the working) and a little work at the barrel and cylinder juncture (both timing and misalignment could need rectification). External factory fit and finish is tolerable and durable, though the grips might need replacement.
I would stay away from a pistol, unless you are very mechanically inclined and lucky to run into one in good condition (very expensive, heard people asking upto a Mil). Look for a .380 ACP, if you want to go the pistol route, hard to find but a lot cheaper than .32's.
BTW, with my budget I could not buy any of the weapons, I previously mentioned and had to settle for a Llama IIIA, .380 ACP, Brigadier's widow sold it for 1.375, early 60's aquisition by that fellow when he was stationed in Poonch as a Captain. Unrepaired and well maintained, though lot of holster wear and no bluing left. Ammo is hard to find, have to look for and stock up when available (100-250 a pop, depending on vintage). Will look into the procedure of taking 50 rounds with me when I go back in a few months.