I wonder how many people that buy them now for 4 to 5 thousand and then when they recieve them find out that they are nothing special.
Perhaps like the emperor's new clothes...not a peep
I wonder how many people that buy them now for 4 to 5 thousand and then when they recieve them find out that they are nothing special.
How many who have posted their opinions about the Python actually have one? Or seven? Just curious, as those that have them seem to have a different opinion of them. And many of us who have them, have a variety of Smiths and Rugers as well to compare them with....though we probably don't have Alpha projects or Taurus revolvers to compare them too.
If I personally want a Python I'll save my money and buy a PYTHON.
Looks aren't everything.
I shot a Python for about 20 minutes or so, really focusing on the feel, etc. And I was thinking the same. Then immediately after, I picked up my Performance Center S&W, which is the cream of my crop, and I immediately could tell how much nicer the Python was in SA. Had I shot them at seperate times, I likely would not have come to the same conclusions. So I guess the key for me is, never shoot them back to back, and the S&W will be just fine. Unfortunately, the genie is now out of the bottle and I'm on my second Python. Still love the Smiths though, better DA and faster trigger return IMO.
Have to disagree. In 1955, hand fitting was normal, and how everything was built. It still continued to exist in Colt's shop, but at every increasing costs... to the point they were being sold at a loss for a long time. Of course that's not sound business, and it didn't last. Now try and assemble, train, and retain a group of hand fitters willing to sit at the bench and fiddle with Pythons day in day out. Times have changed, people are training for much different vocations, and time costs far, far more- the cost to "rewind" to old techniques and retrain skills that barely exist today would be astronomical. I own a Holland & Holland Royal double rifle from the early 20th century, replacement cost today? $210,000 Canadian base. This is one of the few examples of hand fitted guns still available today. The Python always has contained far more machine operations than a H&H, hence why I don't throw out a figure of $20,000. How many Pythons do you own I have to ask, and ever done any firearm finishing? Just the polish and "Royal Blue" bluing job on a Python can run $1,000 at a small hand down shop today. The costs stack up fast, and Colt or others would be turning to small shops with the skills intact to make these hypothetical hand fit Pythons. The P210 is a much simpler design to manufacture well.
Sorry but just because replacement cost on your H&H rifle is 210,000$ does NOT mean it costs them that much. I would be willing to bet my left nut it costs them under 10k to build, and probably even less. With those rifles, you are paying for the quality sure, but you are mainly paying for the brand name and legacy.
...To see why, watch this video for a bit...
Python dreams on a Pietta budget
Sometimes, for myself, it is more enjoyable to simply look at pictures and dream. Dreaming is free.
Ardent - do you have experience working on the new made Colt SAA revolvers? I'm wondering if the value for money is there, or whether there is a whole lot of brand name premium being paid for them.