Colt Police Positive Special

ronl

New member
Just picked up a very solid Colt Police Positive Special in 38 S&W for my mother. Serial # 722xxx. Can anyone tell me what year it was made? On the strap is RHKP, which I believe is Royal Hong Kong police. The old girl still has a sweet trigger.
 

DG45

New member
Colt "Police Positive Special" revolvers shoot 38 Special ammo.

Colt "Police Positive" revolvers shoot 38 S&W ammo.
 

RJay

New member
That's odd, I was under the impression that all of the Hong Kong Sidearms were S&W Model 10s.
 

Jim Watson

New member
Colt "Police Positive Special" revolvers shoot 38 Special ammo.

Ectually, old chap, they did make Police Positive Specials in .38 Colt New Police/.38 Police Positive/.38 S&W. There was still a small market for the round after the shorter Police Positive frame was discontinued so they just chambered the Special length cylinder for it. There are some Police Positive Specials in .32 S&WL (.32 NP), too.
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
Well, old chaps, partially. The first two issues of the PPS were chamberd for .38 Special, .38 Colt New Police/.38 S&W, .32-20, and .32 Colt NP/.32 S&W Long. The third and fourth issues were made in .38 Special only, say the books. But that gun was made in 1958, long after the books say .38 Colt NP was no longer chambered in any Colt revolver.

The books don't take into account the simple fact that Colt would make revolvers in .296 1/4 Upside Down Hassenpfeffer if a customer ordered enough of them. The standard issue police cartridge for most of the Empire at that time was still the .380 Revolver, aka the .38 S&W. The RHKP wanted guns chambered for that cartridge and, to no one's surprise, that is what they got.

Jim
 

ronl

New member
Thanks, guys for the info. The gun is indeed marked .38 Colt N.P. - .38 S&W CTG. Cleaned the old girl up and she looks very good despite her age. Barrel rifling looks very good also. Get to go out and teach my mom how to shoot and maintain it now. That should prove interesting. She's 72 and I don't think she's ever fired a pistol before.
 

DG45

New member
Thanks for the correction. Didn't mean to pass bad information along. But I was really under the apparently mistaken impression that Colt Police Positive Specials were always made in 38 Special cal. But I guess it makes sense that if Colt got a big enough contract they'd do whatever the customer wanted.

I still can't imagine why anybody would want a Police Positive Special in 38 S&W though, instead of a 38 Special. The 38 Special is a more effective round than the 38 S&W round is, and the 38 Special is one of the most inheirently accurate revolver rounds going. They also have low to moderate recoil and blast. 38 Special ammo is plentiful and relatively inexpensive. These revolvers with 38 Special ammo are easy to learn to shoot, and most people can quickly learn to handle one, and most people can achieve good accuracy with a 38 Special revolver after a little practice. All in all, the 38 Special is a very versatile round and was considered THE ideal police round for many years. Why no love for the 38 Special in Hong Kong.

Whoever made the decision to get Colt Police Positive Specials, but not get them in the caliber that made them "Special" makes no sense whatsoever to me. It had had to beone of those decisions made at "echelons above reason".
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
It might make sense if you already have a few million rounds of .380 (.38 S&W) ammunition lying around, as in British military surplus. In that case, going to a different cartridge would be very reasonable, no matter what supposed advantages the different round might have.

Jim
 
Whoever made the decision to get Colt Police Positive Specials, but not get them in the caliber that made them "Special" makes no sense whatsoever to me. It had had to beone of those decisions made at "echelons above reason".

It might make sense if you already have a few million rounds of .380 (.38 S&W) ammunition lying around, as in British military surplus. In that case, going to a different cartridge would be very reasonable, no matter what supposed advantages the different round might have.

Wouldn't it seem likely that revolvers purchased for the police force of a British Dependent Territory would be chambered for a standard British cartridge?

I would imagine that the HKP may have also used, at various times, Enfield and Smith and Wesson revolvers that fired the .38-200 cartridge.

I've read that Ruger produced the Speed Six in .38-200 for India.
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
Ever see an S&W Model 642 chambered for the 5.6 Velodog? Well, order 50,000 of them, cash on the barrelhead, and you will.

Jim
 

SIGSHR

New member
IIRC S&W made a large number of their Military & Police revolvers for the UK at one point. .38 S&W-or .380/200 if you prefer-pretty much as the "Police"
caliber in those parts of the British Empire that either were subject to direct rule or not given Dominion status until very late-India, e.g. Also the 38 S&W in the hands of a well trained individual is nothing to sneer at.
 

BillCA

New member
There are a few advantages for the .38 S&W cartridge in a small revolver like the Colt D-frame PPS. It'll have low recoil, decent enough accuracy and it can be handloaded for more effectiveness.

Winchester still produces a 146gr LRN .38 S&W cartridge so factory ammo is available. For a 72 year old woman, it's not a bad choice. Suffice it to say that she must be told that more than one shot may be necessary.
38SWv38Special.jpg

.38 S&W vs. .38 S&W Special

We used to "upload" the .38 S&W with swaged 148gr LHBWC loaded with 3.0 grains of Red-Dot to make 800 fps (6"). It was reasonably accurate too.
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
For a lot of years, .38 S&W was considered the "high power" police load; the standard was the .32 S&W Long (or the Colt equivalent). Even after .38 Special was well established, a lot of cops carried the Regulation Police in .38 S&W and many more plain clothes police carried the little S&W Terrier.

IMHO, the older cartridge will do very well for personal defense; especially if the lower recoil allows better shot placement. It is certainly no less effective than the much-touted .380 ACP and a good revolver will be a lot more accurate (and reliable) than some of the .380's on the market.

Bill, I would agree that "more than one shot may be necessary" even if the gun were in .500 S&W. Fortunately, I have no personal experience in shooting people, but I have seen enough reports to know that "one shot stops" and "one shot, one kill" are more gunzine buzz words than reality when talking handgun calibers.

Jim
 

BillCA

New member
Jim - I agree. The reminder that more than one shot may be necessary - especially with the .38 S&W and similar low-pressure rounds - is simply a way of dispelling the Hollywood notions most non-shooters might have. Especially a senior citizen who's never fired a gun before and has had decades of "Television experience".

Plenty of hold-up men died as a result of the .38 S&W during the 1880's through the 1930's. I rather like the cartridge. It can be loaded with a 148gr LSWC up to about 790fps within pressure specs while still maintaining good accuracy. This emulates the older, 158gr @ 760 fps -- which is about the same as most .38 Special RNL loadings today. But the .38 S&W revolvers are a tad more compact and "handy" too.
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
In a good solid revolver (like the S&W M&P or that Colt PPS), the .38 S&W can be loaded as hot as the standard .38 Special or into the .38 Special +P range. Even the standard factory load is nothing to stand in front of and, as you say, a lot of folks found that out the hard way.

I wish people would quit downrating cartridges. Some of the newbies think that a .25 ACP or a .32 S&W is harmless or will bounce off a well-starched T shirt. There have even been some fools who allowed themselves to be shot by other fools because "I thought those old guns wouldn't hurt anybody." The ones who lived to say things like that were the lucky ones.

Jim
 

BlueTrain

New member
I have seen a Ruger revolver in .38 S&W, new in box, only I don't remember which model, probably the Speed Six. I seem to recall it sat on the shelf at the store for a long time and for all I know, it may be there now. So even they made them.

Although S&W made a lot of their M&P revolver in that caliber, I never understood why the army listed it in that caliber, which the manual referred to as ".38 Regular," among other designations inclucing .38/200 and .38 S&W. Only the 5" barrel model was listed, I believe, and I even think I've seen photos of army troops around 1970 or a little earlier, judging from the uniforms, practicing with that particular revolver. I am referring to an army manual of small arms published around 1955 which lists and illustrates all the army's small arms at the time.

Under the for-what-it's-worth heading, the standard army and air force loading for the .38 Special for a long time was a 130-grain FMJ load, which was unlikely to have been any better than a hardware store old stock box of .38 S&W.
 

BillCA

New member
Blue Train,

The .38 S&W or .38/200 cartridge was the British service cartridge during WW-II. Under Roosevelt's lend-lease program, tens of thousands of S&W (and some Colt) revolvers were shipped to the U.K. for military service. Many of these were stamped "U.S. Property" on the left topstrap. In post-war years, then M&P revolvers (actually called the K-200) were returned to the USA through various means and sold as surplus. Probably half were coverted to .38 Special. S&W continued to carry & catalog the .38 S&W in the M&P revolver (later to become the Model 11) until the 1960s. Their .38 Regulation Police was an I-frame 5-shot and later a J-frame, just before it was discontinued in the 60's.

From WW-II on, the standard revolver cartridge for the U.S. military was the .38 Special. It would not surprise me to have found a few .38 S&W chambered revolvers in various armories though. Being an Air Force brat, I grew up around a couple of airbases and only saw .38 Specials in use between the mid 1950's and 1980's.

Magnumitis
I agree with Jim on the way a lot of people sneer at certain cartridges. The .32 S&W and .32 S&W Long are pretty anemic by today's standards. Yet, the NYPD used them in the early 20th Century under Teddy Roosevelt's charge as police commissioner. Not that they were always effective, but more often than not, they did work. The .38 S&W at close range will certainly kill you with a well placed shot. So will a .32 S&W or .32 Long. A school chum of mine worked on the Alaskan pipeline in the 70's - lots of rough men there. A fight erupted over a poker game one night and one man slashed at another with a hunting knife. The other pulled a gun - an old RCMP Colt in .455 - and fired one shot. Didn't kill the man, but he no longer felt like making a nusiance of himself either.

I'll admit that I haven't much use for the .32 ACP or .25 Auto, but they still have their place in a fight at "bad breath" distances.
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
Never say impossible, but the .38 S&W cartridge was never in U.S. service, and no S&W's made for the U.S. were chambered for that cartrige. It has been a while since I have seen that manual, but I don't recall any mention of .38 S&W, only of .38 Special.

Did someone, somewhere, in DoD have some .38 S&W caliber guns? Wouldn't be too surprised but they would have had to buy the ammo on their own.

I agree that that 130 grain FMJ ball was pretty worthless. But of course it had to be issued to conform to the Hague convention.

Jim
 

BlueTrain

New member
Oh, it was in the US Army manual, all right, and there were S&W revolvers made in that caliber. I had one. It was a 5" barrel version with a plain wooden grip. The barrel was indeed marked with ".38 S&W Ctg." designation. The revolver was literally covered with stamps, both British and Austrian, so it had been around. There were no importer markings.

Although that particular revolver was really listed in the manual, which I promise to dig out and reference, it doesn't follow that any were actually used on active service overseas, presumably there were some somewhere. However, there was only the one in that caliber while at the same time there were about six or eight other revolver models also listed, I think all in .38 special caliber. I suspect there were still .45 ACP revolvers there, too, but I don't remember right now. There weren't any in .455 though.

There were a lot of war surplus revolvers sold in the 1950s and judging from advertisments in old gun magazines, a lot of them were modified, presumably to make them more marketable. It looked like a lot had barrels shortened to two inches (they lack the forward latch under the barrel but have a full length ejector rod), nickel plated and have new grips of stag (real or plastic, can't tell). I think there have been threads about such variations here before.

There were even some Ruger revolvers used by the military before they were done with revolvers.
 
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