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  1. #1
    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    Swiss 1882 Revolver

    Kind of excited, scored this at Cabela's so it's a freebie. Add to that the price they were asking was under what they are going for, it was also on sale for 10% off which was not advertised, and I get a 5% military discount on top of that meaning I still have points left over.

    It has been described as having an excellent bore, the one grip might be a replacement and the base of the butt has obviously been polished but I can live with that. One of the first 20,000 so it has the plastic grips. All visible numbers match.

    It will be a couple of weeks before I have it as it's not local.

    And somehow, my wife is mad at me over this. I can't win. I have been complaining for a month that they have seemingly doubled the prices on everything, so my points aren't going to go very far, and I end up getting what is a good deal on something I wanted.





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  3. #2
    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    Made in 1916. This was near the end of the Bakelite grips. They went to wood due to shortages caused by WWI.

    Seems to be some conflicting information on whether you can shoot 32 S&W Long in it. The Swissicon say you can but everyone else says the cases split at a high rate. Something about using 32-20 cases and cutting them down.
    Last edited by Aragorn243; 06-16-2024 at 07:37 AM.

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    Contributing Member Low & Slow's Avatar
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    Looks like an interesting reloading proposition. Heeled bullets and in-barrel swaging can complicate matters.

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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    I'd go the whole route of making from existing brass, like 32/20 if it works. I'd find out which cast bullet mold was closest and get makin'...looks like a neat revolver to warm up.
    Regards, Jim

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    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    I hate waiting. They deducted my points on Sunday and removed the listing yesterday so progress is being made. In the meantime I'm watching videos.

    The elephant in the room that no one seems to be able to address is why this was kept as a black powder round for it's entire production into the 1960's. The best explanation seems to be that the earliest revolvers had a top strap that was only 1mm thick. Smokeless powder could have cut through that eventually. But these were only the first 4000 so these could have been removed from service. They went to 3mm after that and finally to 4mm at 17,000.

    I see that handloaders have developed some loads giving it slightly better performance, an additional 200 fps but only for the later made revolvers.

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    Contributing Member Low & Slow's Avatar
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    From what I understand, smokeless was tested for the revolver at least twice, once early on, and a second time with the strengthened 1929 upgrade. Evidently, these Swissicon tests proved unsatisfactory, so they just kept on with the black powder loads for the revolvers right up to the end. Obviously, all their auto loading pistols from 1900 on used smokeless only.
    Last edited by Low & Slow; 06-24-2024 at 05:52 PM.

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    Legacy Member Eaglelord17's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aragorn243 View Post
    Made in 1916. This was near the end of the Bakelite grips. They went to wood due to shortages caused by WWI.

    Seems to be some conflicting information on whether you can shoot 32 S&W Long in it. The Swissicon say you can but everyone else says the cases split at a high rate. Something about using 32-20 cases and cutting them down.
    I can and do shoot 32 S&W long through my 1882 and 1929 without issue, I just don't reuse the brass.

    Quote Originally Posted by Aragorn243 View Post
    I hate waiting. They deducted my points on Sunday and removed the listing yesterday so progress is being made. In the meantime I'm watching videos.

    The elephant in the room that no one seems to be able to address is why this was kept as a black powder round for it's entire production into the 1960's. The best explanation seems to be that the earliest revolvers had a top strap that was only 1mm thick. Smokeless powder could have cut through that eventually. But these were only the first 4000 so these could have been removed from service. They went to 3mm after that and finally to 4mm at 17,000.

    I see that handloaders have developed some loads giving it slightly better performance, an additional 200 fps but only for the later made revolvers.
    They would have already been removed from service by the later dates. The Swiss didn't reissue small arms generally, they would keep them or put them into storage with a new production firearm being made for the next batch of troops. Notable exemptions being the 96/11 rifles when they took back the 1889/96 and converted them to GP-11. It is also why most the Swiss arms are in such good shape, generally only being issued to one soldier for a limited amount of time.

    Personally I think they kept the black powder loading to keep their black powder manufactures in business. The Swiss were very influenced by civilian shooting (including black powder shooters) and would keep not as good tactical firearms due to this, such as keeping the G1911 when the military felt the K1911 was sufficient for military usage and handier. The civilian shooters preferred the G11s due to the longer sight radius and because of that increased target accuracy.

    The US had similar issues with the Krags and 1903 Springfields, needlessly complex sights for a military firearm, yet the marksmen were insistent on it.

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    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    It arrived. Got the call this morning and was working closer to Cabelas than home and finished early, skipped lunch and went and picked it up. Actually went smooth at Cabelas for once. It was paid for in advance with points and the background check went fast for once.

    I have never seen so many numbers on any firearm, let alone one this small. Five-digit serial number on large parts, last three on smaller parts, a separate 3 or 2 number also on many parts. Not sure what this is, assembly number maybe. On top of this it has disassembly order numbers on it. I'll take some photos of this mess tomorrow and see what's what. Swissicon cross on a lot of places also.

    Bore is excellent, some cleaning of the exterior needed. The butt is very heavily polished. Wondering if this might have been an officers pistol and that is the portion that showed outside the holster. I don't have a holster to test this theory.

    Everything works.

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    Legacy Member HOOKED ON HISTORY's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Aragorn243 View Post
    And somehow, my wife is mad at me over this. I can't win
    If she makes you sell it let me know. Nicely crafted ,as are all things Swissicon.

  12. #10
    Contributing Member Aragorn243's Avatar
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    Here's some interior pics of the various numbers. It has a separate serial number and fabrication number, I don't know why. Serial number appears to be on everything, the fabrication number only on a few things, so far at least. I did not disassemble it which is supposed to be simple to do. You simply remove part 1 which holds the cylinder, then 2 the cylinder, then 3 and so on. Side frame is hinged. The frame itself appears to have been made by SIG as it is so marked on the bottom of the butt inside.

    I cleaned the little bit of rust off it that I could find. Most of it near the muzzle and the front sight, a little on the trigger guard.











    My wife claims she is no longer mad at me. She didn't realize I had enough points to buy it and thought I was spending cash three weeks after I bought the Steyr-Pieper off Mike.

    Not exactly like I'm throwing money away in any case. Sitting in the bank, it's losing value. Guns just keep going up, faster than even inflation it appears.

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