Industry wide, a lot of the new guns introduced and promised at the SHOT Show the first of the year have been held up. The reason is that demand for certain current-line models has been so great that to keep up with it, the newer entries had to be pushed to the back burner. It’s true of many companies, and it is certainly true of Smith & Wesson.

I’m presently at a gun writers’ seminar in Tulsa, on the splendid USSA (United States Shooting Academy) range. We’re getting to play with some of the cool new rifles and handguns from this maker that should have been available to the consumers by now…and would have been, if the post-election gun buying frenzy natinwide hadn’t thrown production schedules into a cocked hat.

As nature gave us a panoply of its broad range of Oklahoma weather through the day — by turns windy and still, pouring rain and unremitting sun — we got briefed by S&W executives and engineers, and got to put lots of rounds downrange.

Star of the show, I think, was the coolest little .22 rifle to come along in a while. It’s the .22 Long Rifle version of their M&P 15, which in turn is Smith & Wesson’s take on what has truly become “America’s Rifle,” the AR15. Rendered with lots of polymer, including even the accessory rail, it weighs only about five pounds or so. More than a dozen of us poured 25-round magazines of CCI ammo through it, and I didn’t see a single malfunction. Accuracy was good on the “practical range,” shooting all sorts of steel knockdowns and silhouettes. We will be taking it to the longer rifle ranges tomorrow and hope to be able to bench test it for accuracy. It will sell for $499.95 suggested retail, and I predict it will definitely be a hit.

We plan to work with a precision rifle from Thompson/Center, now of course a Smith & Wesson subsidiary, tomorrow.

On the handgun side, the adjustable sight version of the 1964 Model 57 in .41 Magnum proved eminently “shootable.” Something of a “niche cartridge” these days, the .41 Mag has always had a strong following among those who really knew their guns and appreciated a heavy-duty outdoorsman’s revolver. We also got to shoot the new iterations of the great old K-22, in both 6″ barrel Model 17 and 4″ barrel Model 18 configurations. These are recent additions to S&W’s successful “retro” line they call the Classic Series.

There are also new variations in their super-popular Military & Police semiautomatic service pistol line, and their 1911 series semiautomatic pistols, and more.

I’ll get back to you after tomorrow’s shooting session, with more info, and should have some pix for you by the end of this week.

1 COMMENT

  1. Mas I know that the internal lock on the Smith’s is a hot button with the company. BUT….might you quietly ask around about its future status and get back to us all? If sworn to secrecy, we promise not to tell anyone…. 🙂

  2. I look forward to sampling the little .22 AR “like” rifle. reports of the .41 Magnum have me drooling, but as long as it has the “Hillary Hole”, “Clinton Lock” or any other name to call that abomination I will have to refrain on purchasing any new S&W handguns.

    I do own a few with the “Hillary Hole”, but I refuse to buy any more after one locked up on me at the Range. S&W was fast, to their credit, in repairing the revolver and returning it to me. I just feel that it was something that never should’ve happened.

    I don’t mind the Ruger version of the lock because it is out of the way and from what I have seen, almost impossible to accidentally engage, rendering the revolver unusable.

    I look forward to the PICS. Have fun, take care and stay safe.

    Biker

  3. Mas,

    I got to play with the 15-22 a couple weeks ago. It was love at first press… much better then the Colt IMO. As soon as they release them with a threaded barrel I’ll pick one up.

    The only complaint I have with the new S&W and Colt AR-22s is that the magizines are proprietary. Neither will work in the others gun and I know the Colt won’t work with a Colt .22 Conversion (WTF is up with THAT!?!). The SW Mag may work but I haven’t had a chance to try it out. If I can get my AR and the .22 conversion back from Tiffany I’ll check it out.

  4. I agree with BikerRN…the K-22’s do interest me as would an affordable Model 41. A .22LR AR-15 platform that is reliable is a novel idea ! Tired of magazine problems and “one flavor” ammo AR conversions I would gladly dish out $500 for something that would work with whatever bulk pack ammo I can happen to find.

    Yet a classic K-22 or .41 Mag with the H-Hole on the side would just not seem quite right. Hide it unde the grip, get rid of it and provide a cable lock like others do or I’ll just pass and buy a vintage version when the opportunity arises.

  5. i’m going to be able to look at the 15-22 soon at my local shop, or so i hear. along with some interesting kel-tec offerings…

    but i’m REALLY drooling over the idea of the SIG 522 model based on the wildly popular SIG 556. should be a hoot.

    ^_^