So I had a beautiful 1912 production Smith and Wesson Military & Police in 38 special. Gorgeous gun. A man offered to buy it off me during the summer for about 6 times what I had gotten it for so I sold it to him and bought another one (great shape 1941 mfg'd 3 T's) Specifically asked the seller of gun #2 if it was a 38 S&W or a 38 Special as the ad only said "38" and was told "I shoot the same ammo I put through my .357 magnum through it". Okay, awesome. Stupid me assumes that means the gun was actually just 38 special and not something weird because if it wasn't you'd expect someone to say that...anyway. 
Gun shows up and it's a 38 Smith & Wesson with the cylinder reamed out to hold 38 Special. I had never heard about this prior to my unwitting adventure into the ownership of one, apparently it was the fate of many many 38 S&W's after the war because of the increased popularity of 38 Special.
Been trying to do some research on them and the internet is full of wildly conflicting anecdotal advice. I listed the gun on here briefly before I gave up hope with my available timeline (none?). I'd rather have my butchered 38 S&W than no wheel gun at all but I was contacted by a gunsmith who basically said it was totally fine and not to worry about it, my cases will just take a bit of a beating. I've also read stories online of frames rupturing and shooters sustaining injuries though but "a buddy of mine said he saw..." stories online are worth what you pay for them sometimes.
Now, it's my understanding that modern 38 S&W ammo is normally loaded with .357's anyway so really it shouldn't matter much outside of some case.bulge....but would you guys trust it? Would you let your wife or friends shoot it? Should I just throw it in the back of the safe and forget I own it? 38 special fits perfectly fine with plenty of room and very very minimal rattle in the cylinder. Very frustrated because if I ever thought I'd be buying a gun that I was going to question whatsoever I wouldn't have ever bought it but I have what I have now I guess. Was this practice done on other service revolvers at the time? Are there a bunch of top break No. 2's floating around out there that can shoot 38 special?

Gun shows up and it's a 38 Smith & Wesson with the cylinder reamed out to hold 38 Special. I had never heard about this prior to my unwitting adventure into the ownership of one, apparently it was the fate of many many 38 S&W's after the war because of the increased popularity of 38 Special.
Been trying to do some research on them and the internet is full of wildly conflicting anecdotal advice. I listed the gun on here briefly before I gave up hope with my available timeline (none?). I'd rather have my butchered 38 S&W than no wheel gun at all but I was contacted by a gunsmith who basically said it was totally fine and not to worry about it, my cases will just take a bit of a beating. I've also read stories online of frames rupturing and shooters sustaining injuries though but "a buddy of mine said he saw..." stories online are worth what you pay for them sometimes.
Now, it's my understanding that modern 38 S&W ammo is normally loaded with .357's anyway so really it shouldn't matter much outside of some case.bulge....but would you guys trust it? Would you let your wife or friends shoot it? Should I just throw it in the back of the safe and forget I own it? 38 special fits perfectly fine with plenty of room and very very minimal rattle in the cylinder. Very frustrated because if I ever thought I'd be buying a gun that I was going to question whatsoever I wouldn't have ever bought it but I have what I have now I guess. Was this practice done on other service revolvers at the time? Are there a bunch of top break No. 2's floating around out there that can shoot 38 special?




















































