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Subject: "Special Guest Star: H&R 732"     Previous Topic | Next Topic
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Gryphonadmin
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Apr-08-17, 06:19 PM (EDT)
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"Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
 
   My sainted mother asked me to clean a gun for her today, so I took the opportunity to get a couple of pictures.

We have here a Model 732 revolver, vintage 1966, made by the Worcester, Massachusetts-based firm of Harrington & Richardson. This was one of the many firearms factories that once (and not that long ago) flourished in southern New England; they were known for decent-but-not-outstanding build quality, solid if unimagiative design, and low cost. They were also one of the manufacturers that made guns to be sold under resellers' own names; the big department stores (Sears, Roebuck & Co., Montgomery Ward, et al.) used to sell rebadged H&Rs (among others) in their catalogs.

The Model 732 is a thoroughly conventional double-action revolver, with a six-shot cylinder chambered for the .32 S&W cartridge.

The cylinder rotates clockwise (from the shooter's perspective), like contemporary Colts (trivia: Smith & Wessons turn the other way), and swings out on a crane like any other side-loading DA revolver. One interesting feature is that there isn't a separate release for the cylinder, as you find on Colt and S&W revolvers; instead, the cylinder axis pin is the latch. You just pull it forward and swing the cylinder out. Pushing the same pin back actuates the ejector, just like in any other swing-out revolver I can think of.

Note that all of this revolver's markings are on the left side (apart from the serial number, which is on the bottom of the grip frame), and they are quite minimal. Model number, cartridge, manufacturer's name and country. It doesn't even specify the city, because in 1966 they didn't have to. (Didn't technically need to have serial numbers, in fact, but most reputable manufacturers did them anyway.) Over on the right side, there's nothing at all, apart from the H&R cartouche on the grip.

Other information:

.32 S&W was originally developed to hold a whopping (note: sarcasm) nine grains of black powder. It's another of those ancient cartridges, like .38 S&W and .44 Russian, that was the starting point for a whole series of progressively longer, more powerful rimmed cartridges having the same case head/rim geometry and bullet diameter: .32 S&W Long (also known as .32 Colt New Police, because Colt didn't want to put "S&W" on their stuff), .32 H&R Magnum, and .327 Federal Magnum. (None of which should be mistaken for .32 ACP, which is entirely unrelated.)

The original is an extremely stubby cartridge, no longer than the diameter of a U.S. quarter dollar, and was once held in high esteem as the most powerful of the "belly gun" cartridges—that is, cartridges intended to be used in guns that were only of use at extremely short ranges, such as, for example, the width of a card table.

(And yes, this is about as lofty a distinction as being the tallest Smurf. :)

Interestingly (to me, at least), the first of its longer offspring, .32 Long, is still popular among precision target shooters. I guess it has a particularly flat trajectory at the ranges used in that kind of shooting or something? Not sure.

H&R went out of business in 1986, although—naturally—there's another company using the name now. (In fact, I believe they go so far as to call themselves "H&R 1871", to trade on the original company's founding date. Sorry to keep banging on about this, but that kind of thing really winds me up for some reason.)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


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  Subject     Author     Message Date     ID  
Special Guest Star: H&R 732 [View All] Gryphonadmin Apr-08-17 TOP
  RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 StClair Apr-10-17 1
     RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 Gryphonadmin Apr-10-17 2
         RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 CdrMike Apr-10-17 3
             RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 JFerio Apr-10-17 4
                 RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 Gryphonadmin Apr-10-17 5
                     RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 JFerio Apr-11-17 6
  RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732 Gryphonadmin May-26-17 7

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StClair
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Apr-10-17, 02:20 AM (EDT)
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1. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #0
 
   Complete tangent off that last bit:

So, do you feel similarly about the current holders of the Activision, Atari, et al names/brands?


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Gryphonadmin
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Apr-10-17, 02:40 AM (EDT)
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2. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #1
 
   >Complete tangent off that last bit:
>
>So, do you feel similarly about the current holders of the Activision,
>Atari, et al names/brands?

Well, there are a lot of different ways for these names to get passed along, and I react to them slightly differently. For instance (as far as I can recall), Activision passed through a crazy series of mergers and bankruptcies and offspins and so forth, but never entirely ceased to exist and then some other company started using the name (like Atari). It's like the difference between someone who has changed so much you don't really know him any more, but is still the same actual dude, and someone who is obviously a different dude wearing a rubber mask. :) For whatever reason, the latter annoys me a lot more than the former.

In the case of things like Springfield Armory's "since 1794" nonsense and "H&R 1871", it especially irritates me because they are explicitly trading on a history that isn't theirs. I guess the difference in how I react to "heritage brands" in general is whether it feels like homage or deception.

(Or, to take a converse example, a repellently transparent financial dodge, like the "new" General Motors skiving off the old one's debts and contracts because Oh, We're a Totally Different Company, We Just Bought the IP—Honest.)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


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CdrMike
Member since Feb-20-05
899 posts
Apr-10-17, 11:11 AM (EDT)
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3. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #2
 
   >Well, there are a lot of different ways for these names to get passed
>along, and I react to them slightly differently. For instance (as far
>as I can recall), Activision passed through a crazy series of mergers
>and bankruptcies and offspins and so forth, but never entirely ceased
>to exist and then some other company started using the name (like
>Atari). It's like the difference between someone who has changed so
>much you don't really know him any more, but is still the same actual
>dude, and someone who is obviously a different dude wearing a rubber
>mask. :) For whatever reason, the latter annoys me a lot more than
>the former.

As opposed to the third method, which is treating acquired studios with all the care of a parasitic wasp using a spider to incubate her young. Yes, EA, I'm looking at you and the hollowed-out husks you've made of several famous game studios. The final insult being when you turn them into "EA (insert city name) Studio " so as to remove any connection whatsoever to their heritage. Maxis, Westwood, and Origin are just are just a few names that EA wiped off the map over the last two decades.

--------------------------
CdrMike, Overwatch Reject

"You know, the world could always use more heroes." - Tracer, Overwatch


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JFerio
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Apr-10-17, 09:14 PM (EDT)
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4. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #3
 
   >As opposed to the third method, which is treating acquired studios
>with all the care of a parasitic wasp using a spider to incubate her
>young. Yes, EA, I'm looking at you and the hollowed-out husks you've
>made of several famous game studios. The final insult being when you
>turn them into "EA (insert city name) Studio " so as to remove any
>connection whatsoever to their heritage. Maxis, Westwood, and Origin
>are just are just a few names that EA wiped off the map over the last
>two decades.

Or, worse, managed to destroy their legacy of work before folding them up and stashing them in the bottom of the closet. The specific thing I'm thinking is Maxis and the MESS they made of the SimCity franchise, effectively killing it.





Jeffrey 'JFerio' Crouch
'It'll be all right... I think.' - Nene Romanova



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Gryphonadmin
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22411 posts
Apr-10-17, 09:47 PM (EDT)
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5. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #4
 
   >Or, worse, managed to destroy their legacy of work before folding them
>up and stashing them in the bottom of the closet. The specific thing
>I'm thinking is Maxis and the MESS they made of the SimCity franchise,
>effectively killing it.

SimCity isn't dead, it's just made by different people and called Cities: Skylines now. :)

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


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JFerio
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Apr-11-17, 09:19 AM (EDT)
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6. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #5
 
   >SimCity isn't dead, it's just made by different people and
>called Cities: Skylines now. :)

And it's been sitting in my Steam library for a while, awaiting an opportunity for me to spend a whole day just playing with it. :)





Jeffrey 'JFerio' Crouch
'It'll be all right... I think.' - Nene Romanova



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Gryphonadmin
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22411 posts
May-26-17, 11:02 PM (EDT)
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7. "RE: Special Guest Star: H&R 732"
In response to message #0
 
   Hey, gang. The next GotW is taking a little longer, but in the meantime, here's an Artsy-Craftsy Thing I did a while ago.

So I had my mother's H&R Model 732. And I had this cool wooden box that a fancypants set of wine serving paraphernalia came in. And I had some cardboard and glue and a utility knife. And a cutting mat. And some hours. And an idea. All I was missing was some felt, so I went and bought some.

Only after I gave it back did it occur to me that I should have made some holes for cartridges, and maybe lined the lid of the box as well. Perhaps I'll get it back sometime and remodel it a bit. For the time being, though, I'm pretty pleased with that outcome, given that it was the first felt-lined custom conformal presentation box insert I've ever made...

--G.
-><-
Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod
Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/
zgryphon at that email service Google has
Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.


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