August 16, 2014, 12:02 AM | #76 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 9, 2009
Location: North Alabama
Posts: 8,308
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heavy
I "walked beside" (skeeter skelton phrase) a 4" 686 for about 5 years nearly every day. Prior that, we'd carried K frames. I could clearly feel that the 686 was noticeable heavier on a duty belt. In the literature, the 4" 686 was several ounces heavier than my 4" 629 N-frame Mountain Gun in .44.
Unless the aforementioned camp/hiking gun is gonna stay in the truck or hang on a limb, I'd want a K frame to hike with.. may be a M66 or M65. And, for me, a "camp gun" is something that gets shot a bit in camp, and for that, .38's do fine. The extra beef of the L frame, useful in taming the .357, would not always be needed. I liked the 686 as a shooter. Shot my best qual scores, and when we went to 125/357 ammo, the big revolvers extra beef was appreciated. It was easier to shoot than a K with full house loads. But it was a pain to tote every day. No "harden up" comments please. |
August 16, 2014, 01:19 AM | #77 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 15, 2002
Location: Michigan
Posts: 1,429
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Stumbled onto a nice 686 no dash about y2kish. Old six shooter.
Came with a speed loader and a vintage figure 8 leather holster. About $425 IIRC. It looks bone stock, and shoots anything, but has the sweetest SA and pretty nice DA. It's only a 2 1/2" snubby, but man is that gun accurate. It outshoots any .357 I have, including a Dan Wesson 715, a vintage 586 with a 'click' sight, a 627 'model of 1989' six shooter all with 4, 5, and 6 inch barrels. With the right ammo, it shoots 2" groups at 25 yards with no drama. And no, I don't want to sell it.
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August 16, 2014, 04:09 PM | #78 |
Senior Member
Join Date: September 6, 2011
Location: Kansas
Posts: 319
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My 4" 686 is one of the most accurate revolvers that I own.
As it used to look with factory Hogues As it looks now with the Ahrends coco bolo targets |
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