S&W’s Big .44

Developed in 1954 and '55 and announced in January of 1956, Smith & Wesson's .44 Mag. has been a consistent favorite of the shooting public for over half a century. It came some 20 years after the company's first Magnum revolver—the .357. This earlier gun and cartridge were enormous trend-setters and got American handgunners thinking about really powerful revolvers because the added power offered two major advantages. The first was increased practical range, while the second advantage was plain smashing power that could harvest the largest game animals at closer ranges. The .357 did all of these things, but it was the .44 Mag. that took hold of the American consciousness and never let go. It was a bread and butter gun for the Massachusetts firm, with a little help from Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry.

Over the 50-plus years they have made .44 Mags. (called Model 29s after 1957), we have seen these guns in many forms. At first all we had was blue 4- and 6 ½-inch versions, after which they added 8 3/8-inch guns, nickel-finishes, a handful of the exceptionally rare 5-inch models, Lew Horton 3-inchers and even stainless steel. In the late 80s, Smith & Wesson came out with heavy-barreled .44s with a new underlug and improved accuracy. Around this time, the Performance Center was created, which put a new spin on the 29 and 629. When scandium came along, the company's engineers applied themselves and produced a lightweight .44 Mag., which was the hardest-kicking, nastiest handgun of any kind I have ever fired. With real Magnum ammo, it takes the discipline of a Marine fresh out of boot camp to finish a cylinder of six rounds. I would venture a rough guess of somewhere between 50 and a 100 distinct variations of the .44 Mag. have been made.

As a gunwriter specializing in pistols and revolvers, I have had the incredible good fortune—and the cooperation of Smith & Wesson, Inc.—to have received samples of many of these variations for shooting evaluation and writeup. Heck, I once had seven samples of the 7 1/2- inch Classic DX after somebody complained to my editor that I was getting cherry picked samples. I collected seven guns from all over the country and shot them all in the same multi-load protocol. There was about 3/8-inch difference in average 6-shot group size. On maybe two dozen occasions, I have headed for the range with a new S&W .44 Mag., a big box of assorted loads, Oehler chronograph and a Ransom Rest. I have never had one that was plainly inaccurate and there have been many that would shoot one-hole groups with several loads, going twice around the cylinder for twelve rounds. But the one gun that is my odds-on favorite is a Classic DX with the 5-inch barrel option. This one came along some 20 years back.  It isn't the most accurate .44 I have ever fired, but it is very smooth on the trigger, rides easy in several different Milt Sparks and Lawrence holsters and will deliver one hole groups with three or four loads.  Its handiness, balance, sight interchangeability and accuracy, along with a set of Herrett's Jordan Trooper stocks make for a hell of a fine field revolver and that's why I kept it.

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9 Responses to S&W’s Big .44

Dale wrote:
November 03, 2011

My 6" blue 29 is not only a beautiful gun its accurate for me, out to 50 yards on big game and can stay on a silhouette at 100 yards. It carrys good in a shoulder holster under my coat.

Marvin wrote:
November 01, 2011

I had a 6 inch blue model 29 pinned barrel for years then they came out with the 629, I had to have one. These two guns were the best 44 mag. I have ever owned. I wish I still had the old model 29 but I traded it for the 629. I still carry it hunting to this day,

Gary wrote:
October 31, 2011

The .44 Magnum was the biggest and baddest handgun to be had for many years but I think it is now time to reevaluate the pecking order. Today we clearly have four levels of "power" to choose from depending on the need, either real or imagined. In 4th place I would put the .357 Magnum. Next up, in 3rd place, would be both the .41 and .44 Magnums. While the .44 is just a tad more powerful, there really isn't that much difference between them and you can consider them interchangeable. In 2nd place, we have the .454 Casull and at the top of the pile we have the .500. The divisions are based on "meaningful" differences in power. For instance, if you needed some protection against mountain lion while hiking you would probably consider the .357 as minimum. But by stepping up a category to the .41 or .44 you would consider yourself much better armed. If you envisioned running into a pesky black bear the minimum would be a .41 or .44 but a .454 would certainly be much more comforting to have along. And while a .454 might only irritate the elephants eating up your garden, the .500 would certainly get their attention.

frankie wrote:
October 31, 2011

I love my nickel 29-2 with 6 1/2 barrel. It is a gd all round gun, But with rounds faster then 1500fps it does hurt your hand.

Tom wrote:
October 31, 2011

I have many 44's and 357's but if I could have only one handgun it would be my 4" S&W 629 - - What a GREAT gun!!

CHUCK wrote:
October 31, 2011

My favorites were the 3 screw R Superblackhawk .44 in 7.5" using Elmer K 429421 & 22gr 2400 and the M29 8 3/8 same load also have the 4" & 6.5" M29

Pete wrote:
October 27, 2011

Forget the .44 magnum, get one of the .357 magnums on the N-frame. Eight rounds of devastating .357 and manageable recoil.

Gary wrote:
October 27, 2011

I agree that the scandium .44 magnum is one nasty gun to fire. A friend bought one, we took it to the range, and I fired 3 rounds which was my limit. The only gun that is worse is the scandium .357; my limit was only one round and never again! Amazingly, the Taurus Titanium in .41 Magnum is a pleasant gun to shoot, in comparison. Must be the grips and the porting that makes it all possible. My 8 3/8-inch M629 Classic gives me over 1500 fps with the 240-grain Hornady XTP and over 1300 fps with the 270-grain Speer Gold Dot. That makes for a great combination gun to take camping.

Duane wrote:
October 21, 2011

Clapp I agree. I have a 629 "Backpacker" and it is by far my favorite.