

- SMITH AND WESSON MODEL 10 5 SERIAL NUMBERS LIST SERIAL NUMBER
- SMITH AND WESSON MODEL 10 5 SERIAL NUMBERS LIST SERIES
the last three indicate the production number or just part of the date code?" There really isn’t a "date code" like you have with, say, Marlin. Photos would be a huge help, especially if you show the top of the gun, above the cylinder. If you want to post some pictures and ask further about your revolver, please go here: It also would help a lot if you post the complete serial number. The proper place for asking questions is on the forum, not in the blog section. That is more information than I normally would have provided in a blog post response. You have to know where to look to find the other two screws. Your revolver will have a 5 screw frame, not 3. This was sort of a "transition" period between military shipments and the resumption of civilian arms production. Those that went to civilian distributors left later, many in March, 1946. Navy and most of those shipped in December, ‘45 or January, ‘46. Some revolvers in this serial range went to the U.S.
SMITH AND WESSON MODEL 10 5 SERIAL NUMBERS LIST SERIAL NUMBER
38 Military & Police revolver, with serial number SV772xxx, could have left the factory any time between about December, 1945, and April, 1946. what do you think? Please leave me a Your. If you leave it out, we will most likely misidentify your revolver and will not be able to accurately estimate the year it left the factory. When posting a S&W serial number in a quest for a shipping date, do not fail to include the letter. The key point to remember for Gun Values Board queries is that if your S&W revolver has a letter in front of the serial number, that letter is part of the number. This new number scheme used three letters and four numeric digits. In 1983, the discreet serial prefixes were discarded in favor of a scheme that was common to all S&W revolvers, regardless of frame size or caliber. At that time, they were assigned a ‘J’ prefix, which, with variations, remained in use until 1983. By then, the I frame had been completely phased out and all small frame revolvers were built on the J frame. Small frame revolvers - I frame and J frame - did not have a letter prefix in the serial number until 1969. The ‘S’ numbers on N frame guns lasted until late 1969, when they were discontinued at S333454 and were replaced with ‘N’ prefixes, beginning with N1. There was no conflict with the ‘S’ prefix assigned to fixed sight K frame guns because the N frame numbers were much lower, continuing a number sequence for prewar N frame guns that did not have a prefix. Meanwhile, N frame revolvers were given an ‘S’ prefix for the serial sequence. It was replaced with a ‘D’ prefix in 1968. The ‘C’ prefix remained in use for those revolvers until C999999 was reached at the end of 1967.
SMITH AND WESSON MODEL 10 5 SERIAL NUMBERS LIST SERIES
No one seems to know why it was a ‘C’ and not some other letter, but ‘K’ had already been chosen for the target K frame series and ‘C’ apparently seemed a logical choice for the fixed sight K frame guns. So, in March, 1948, the company needed a new letter prefix for the. S&W had a policy of never going to more than 6 numeric digits in a serial number sequence.) (By “ran out,” I mean they reached 999,999. When the war ended and civilian production picked up again, the postwar Military & Police revolvers got a simple ‘S’ prefix until the Victory number series ran out. So late war Victory models had an ‘SV’ prefix. Near the end of that run, an internal change was made in the lockworks, which was designated by an ‘S’. 38 caliber revolvers were made during the 1942-1945 period.

This was the beginning of the ‘V’ (for Victory) prefix. 38 Military & Police revolvers and production had shifted to the wartime effort of providing military revolvers to the U.S. This practice was kick-started in April, 1942, when they ran out of numbers for the prewar. After the Second World War, S&W began using one-letter prefixes on several models of revolvers.
