Smith & Wesson M&P

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Smith & Wesson Military & Police

Type Service Revolver
Place of origin USA
Service history
Used by US Military and Police,
British Army
Wars World War II
Production history
Manufacturer Smith & Wesson
Variants .38 Hand Ejector,
Military & Police,
Victory model,
Model 10
Specifications
Weight ~ 820 g (unloaded)
Length 254 mm, 260 mm or 286 mm

Caliber .38 Special
.38/200
Action Double Action
Muzzle velocity 305 m/s (.38 spl)
198 m/s (.38/200)
Feed system 6-round cylinder
Sights blade front sight, notched rear sight

The Smith & Wesson Military & Police revolver, later known as the Smith & Wesson Model 10 and (for those produced during WWII) the Smith & Wesson Victory Model, is a .38-calibre, six-shot handgun inititally developed in 1902 as the Smith & Wesson .38 Hand Ejector model.

It is a fixed-sight revolver with a fluted cylinder and typical barrel lengths of either 4 in. (102 mm), 5 in. (125 mm), or 6 in (152 mm), although 2-in (51 mm) barrels are known to have been made.

Contents

[edit] Victory Model

The S&W Model 10 revolvers produced from 1940 to 1945 had serial numbers with a "V" prefix and were known as the Smith & Wesson Victory Model. Huge numbers - over 570,000 - of these pistols, chambered in the .38/200 calibre already in use in the Enfield No 2 Mk I Revolver and the Webley Mk IV Revolver, were supplied to the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa under the Lend-Lease programme during WWII. The S&W Victory was also in service with US forces during WWII, chambered in the well-known and popular .38 Special cartridge. Some of these revolvers remained in service well into the 1990s with units of the US Military and US Coast Guard. Some Lend Lease S&W Victory revolvers originally chambered for the British .38/200 have been returned to the U.S. and rechambered to fire the more-popular and more-powerful .38 Special ammunition, and such revolvers should be so marked on their barrels.

The finish on Victory models is typically either a sandblasted or Parkerized finish, which is noticeably different from the quality blue or nickel/chrome finishes usually found on commercial M&P/Model 10 revolvers.

As its name suggests, the S&W Military & Police revolver was developed for military and police use, and in this regard it was enormously successful, with the Model 10 still being in production today.

[edit] Semi-automatic M&P

As of 2005, Smith & Wesson produces a polymer-framed semi-automatic handgun in 9 mm, .40 S&W, and .357 SIG under the M&P name.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


.38 Calibre
Cartridges
.38 Long Colt (1875) | .38 S&W (1877) | .38 ACP (1900) | .38 Special (1902) | .380 ACP (1908) | .38/200 (1922) | .38 Super (1927)
Revolvers
M1899 Revolver | Smith & Wesson M&P/Victory | Enfield No. 2 Mk I | Colt Detective's Special
Pistols
Colt M1900 | Colt M1902 | Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer | Colt M1908 Pocket Hammerless | Browning M1910 | Walther PPK
Lists
List of handgun cartridges | List of rifle cartridges | List of firearms
British & Commonwealth small arms of World War II
United States infantry weapons of World War II and Korea
Side arms
Colt M1911/A1 | M1917 revolver | Smith & Wesson "Victory" revolver
Rifles & carbines
Springfield M1903 | M1 Garand | M1 Carbine | M1941 Johnson | Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR)
Submachine guns
Thompson ("Tommy Gun") M1928/M1/A1 | M3 "Grease Gun" | Reising M50/M55 | United Defense M42
Machine guns & other larger weapons
Browning M1917 | Browning M1919 | Johnson LMG | Browning M2 HMG | Bazooka | M2 flamethrower