My Boss asked me to clean his gun for him today. See, my boss is one of those police types that is not a gunnie. He's not Anti Gun, by any means. He's just more of a Fudd than a true Gunnie.
Apparently he hasn't cleaned his gun in a few years, and figures it was time. Seeing as we are only required to shoot 60 rounds a year to qualify, he probably has less than 250 rounds through it since it's last cleaning. I sometimes go more than that in a single range session, so it wasn't in any danger of being overly dirty from shooting.
It was, however, seriously neglected. It was dry as a popcorn fart, and I honestly have no idea how a piece of grass got wrapped around the cylinder stop spring. However, everything took down fine, it all got cleaned and lubed, and it got put back together.
But the thing I really wanted to share was the gun. It's a service issued S&W model 66 snub.
2 inches of pure fighting meanness brought to life in stainless. What a badass wheel gun, huh?
This gun is the definition of a service revolver that has been carried a lot and shot little. No endshake, almost no flame cutting of the topstrap, and - the achellies heel of these sweet carrying 66's- no cracks in the shaved-down forcing cone.
When this gun was originally shipped from S&W in the late 80s or early 90s, because the state of Louisiana ordered a butt ton of them, Smith roll-marked them LAPP, for our department.
These 66's are no longer issued. Only agents that were originally issued them and declined to switch to a Glock are still allowed to carry them. As the handful of oldsters that still pack the issued Wheelgun around retire, they are given the option to buy their gun. If they decline, the old 66's get surpluses and sold to a gun store in South central LA who has a contract to move them.
But the state, as it does, depreciated things, and tfhe word around the water cooler is that these old workhorses get offered to sale to the retirees who carried them through their full career for the princely sum of $18.00, USD.
I already told my boss that when he hangs up his gun belt, if he buys the 66, I'll give him $250 for it, no questions asked.