



Moderator: carlson1
I would strongly recommend you have the gun checked by a competent gunsmith to make sure it is safe. I could be wrong, but that engraving on the left side of the slide looks to me like a case number and badge number. I think the weapon was confiscated as evidence somewhere, which meant it sat in a property room without any care for some time.Excaliber wrote:It's worth what you paid for it, but I would suggest having it inspected by an S&W certified armorer before trusting it for defensive purposes.
Great catch, Steve - I didn't look closely enough to notice the engravings until you pointed them out and I enlarged the photo.srothstein wrote:I would strongly recommend you have the gun checked by a competent gunsmith to make sure it is safe. I could be wrong, but that engraving on the left side of the slide looks to me like a case number and badge number. I think the weapon was confiscated as evidence somewhere, which meant it sat in a property room without any care for some time.Excaliber wrote:It's worth what you paid for it, but I would suggest having it inspected by an S&W certified armorer before trusting it for defensive purposes.
Excaliber, could you look at the photo of the left side of the slide and see if you agree on the engraving, please?
I could be wrong about the engraving, since the picture is not very clear on my screen. It doesn't make a difference to me about the engraving or how the police came into it if I am right, just what the time spent in a property room being neglected could have done to the weapon.