I have been a die hard S&W fan from day 1. That said I have my name on a list for a 9mm Pitbull at a LGS.
I have been a die hard S&W fan from day 1. That said I have my name on a list for a 9mm Pitbull at a LGS.
Former LEO (12 years)
Paramedic
B-TOMS
TCCC
TECC
Had a client come in last night with a Charter Arms 38... The trigger would lock up ever 10th shot to the rear... Brand new gun, never fired and probably needs to be broken in. She bought it at the gun show. I was naturally worried with the trigger locking up.
Might have to tell her to get a S&W....
I have a Charter Undercover and I don't really have anything negative to say about it. It's a good gun.
In the late 90s Charter Arms declared chapter 11 bankruptcy and was resurrected as Charter 2000 in 1999, though many (all?) of their currently sold firearms are labeled as Charter Arms.
The consensus from a lot of retired law enforcement gentlemen I've known on the job when the double-action revolver was king is that Charters were a little on the rough side, but generally reliable, good shooting revolvers. I know many who carried them at one point or another in their lives without issues or complaint.
Unfortunately, "were" is the operative word, post-bankruptcy Charters are unmitigated junk, in the same class as Taurus's current offerings, and are more likely than not to serve you poorly and for a short period of time. I have heard no small amount of anecdotes similar to FrankW's of guns exhibiting all manner of problems, usually within their first couple hundred rounds. While the materials are decent enough and I have no doubt that every once in a while a good one slips through, the QC simply isn't there.
In case you're shopping used, a good way to tell if an example is a pre or post bankruptcy gun is to look at the company's stamping:
Pre-bankruptcy examples should be stamped Stratford, Connecticut
Post-bankruptcy guns should be stamped Shelton, Connecticut and may also be stamped either "Charter Arms" or "Charter 2000"
Additionally, I don't know if this is an absolute rule (I'm hardly an expert on Charters), but every Charter revolver I've ever seen with a fully shrouded ejector rod was a post-bankruptcy model and every pre-bankruptcy gun I've seen had an exposed ejector rod - it's as good a method as any of discerning from a glance.
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