where to buy a "pocket hammer"?

JERRYS.

New member
I have a charter arms off duty .38 snub and want to switch the hammer to a pocketable version. the only ones I see on the company web site are the ones that are bobbed flush with the back of the frame.

does anyone know where I can buy the old style pocket hammers that still allowed for S/A cocking?

thanks.
 
If you're talking about what I think you are; a very small thumb piece on the hammer? I think you are going to have to have one made.
 
I have one, that I picked up off ebay. I couldn't get it to work well. (Unlike the factory bobbed hammer off their website, which worked perfectly.)

I think you're going to have to bob your own DA hammer. The good news is that Charter will freely sell you either current hammer for you to install, unlike some other revolver makers.
 
Last edited:
One solution to that problem is to learn to shoot double action. IIRC, the DA on the Charter (at least the old ones) is not bad (though not as good as an S&W) and even a hundred rounds plus dry fire should allow you to become reasonably competent at short range. Then you could carry a gun with a concealed or spurless hammer with confidence.

Jim
 
I've learned how to shoot double action quite well some years ago. the old style pocket hammer is era correct for my gun, not the new version.
 
Last edited:
I've learned how to show double action quite well some years ago.
James K. has the answer, and I don't think he is talking about slow, target style shooting.
I can't grasp the idea of single action revolver hammer cocking for CCW. Actually not even safety clicking on a S/A cocked & locked auto. Too many good, safe, D/A and striker fired firearms of all types to add an extra step that could go wrong in a stressful situation.
 
^^^ Agreed, My Mod. 36 rarely sees SA. I've learned to shoot DA very well. Oh SA is more accurate you say? Not if you learn to "stage" the cylinder. You don't need no stinking hammer spur. :D
 
I don't think some here understand. I don't use this gun long range slow fire target practice, it is a hide-away gun. the hammer spur is not conducive to pocket carry, or least not optimal. the new style slick back type hammers are not era correct for my gun. I want the old style "pocket" hammer. I mentioned it as the kind you can still cock for S/A fire for those that do not know what I'm talking about. that is all.
 
Sorry Jerry, I don't think we were knocking your choice of hammer. I was just speaking in general. And I think the guys were maybe being subjective as to the hammer that IS available for you. I totally understand your reasoning and good luck coming up with one.
 
the kitchen table bobbing of the hammer is not the same. you're taking a hammer designed one way and making it considerably lighter by removing mass. that's a completely different animal than one designed like the old pocket hammers (retained mass but shaped differently).
 
the kitchen table bobbing of the hammer is not the same. you're taking a hammer designed one way and making it considerably lighter by removing mass.
You don't have to remove enough "mass" to make any real difference, since there are factory hammers in the same configuration.
 
the kitchen table bobbing of the hammer is not the same. you're taking a hammer designed one way and making it considerably lighter by removing mass. that's a completely different animal than one designed like the old pocket hammers (retained mass but shaped differently).

The factory bobbed hammer has a lot less metal than the spurred hammer. It works fine.
 
The factory bobbed hammer has a lot less metal than the spurred hammer. It works fine.

the pictures show a smaller hammer pin hole leading me to believe it has the same amount of metal as the spur hammer with the bigger pin hole....

all this is moot. I wanted the old style pocket hammer for a reason and they just aren't around with any regularity.... will have to keep a sharp eye out....
 

Attachments

  • UndercoverExplodedView-S.jpg
    UndercoverExplodedView-S.jpg
    53.3 KB · Views: 26
Back
Top