That's nothing new, but why continue the sin, when simple experience with this tool might open your mind.[PAGEBREAK]History Lesson
Smith & Wesson is one of the world's bastions of revolver-making and inside the company's Springfield, Mass., headquarters pundits of six-gun lore worship at the altar. With good reason. I've been there and it is a religious experience. I was once even fortunate enough to sit at D.B. Wesson's own roll-top desk in his restored office, and I could, indeed, feel the history alive under my fingertips.
Believe me, there are many reasons why old cops look misty-eyed when they talk about their old S&W duty revolver. S&W six-guns have a mystique, an aura about them that is not undeserved and the company continues that great tradition today.
One of the newest S&W revolvers is actually an updated version of the company's Model 10, updated into a stainless-steel revolver. Designated as the Model 66, this medium-framed, six-shot revolver began life as an adjustable-sighted duty gun, basically a clone of the beautifully blued Model 19, which was probably the greatest police duty revolver ever conceived.
To modernize its designs, S&W has created the Performance Center, a very special branch of the company that is populated with a handful of custom pistolsmiths who live to make superlative S&W handguns. Often, what comes from their fertile minds are almost outlandish, highly customized autos and revolvers, based loosely on a factory gun model. However, sometimes, they build a simple, elegant revolver to meet the needs of a select few users. The new Model 66 F Comp is one such revolver.