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Serial number question S&W 1006 |
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September 12th 2009 4:16 AM
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I was wondering what the first three letters of a serial number signify? I have a 1006 with the letters TFCxxxx
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On the whole, I am on the side of the unregenerate who affirms the worth of life as an end in itself, as against the saints who deny it. -Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
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September 12th 2009 4:37 AM
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Damn Business

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Since 1980 S&W started using a 3 letter serial prefix and a 4 digit number for their serial numbers for revolvers.
They started with AAA000.
In 1984 they started using them for all their pistols.
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Isn't that one of the seven signs of the coming apocolypse? Plagues, famine, Noneya buys a gun...
Pepper
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November 4th 2009 10:00 PM
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QUOTE (DKing @ September 11th 2009 10:16 PM)  I was wondering what the first three letters of a serial number signify? I have a 1006 with the letters TFCxxxx It would appear that your gun falls in the 1990 range. I have a close cousin 1006, TEUXXX, that appears to date from February 24th of that year.
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November 4th 2009 10:35 PM
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My 1006 is a TFJXXXX...1989.
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November 5th 2009 7:50 AM
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I have a 1006 I just bought from Gunbroker arriving in a few days, so I don't know the serial # yet. But was wondering how you can tell the manufacture date from the letter prefix? Is there a breakdown on what the letters mean somewhere, or did y'all just call S&W? Thanks.
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November 5th 2009 1:43 PM
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QUOTE (chr123 @ November 5th 2009 1:50 AM)  I have a 1006 I just bought from Gunbroker arriving in a few days, so I don't know the serial # yet. But was wondering how you can tell the manufacture date from the letter prefix? Is there a breakdown on what the letters mean somewhere, or did y'all just call S&W? Thanks. There are tables in Supica and Nahas' excellent Standard Catalog of Smith and Wesson , but there is some overlap between years, and differences between when the frame was made, and when it shipped. If you have the box, look for the 'Spec Ord' number on the end, which will give you the Ordinal Calendar date that it shipped out. In my case, it's 0055, the 55th day of 1990. The first digit is the last digit of the year, and the other three are the day of that year. When you get your new gun, post the prefix letters, and I'll look it up for you.
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November 6th 2009 12:24 AM
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QUOTE (JCole @ November 5th 2009 8:43 AM)  There are tables in Supica and Nahas' excellent Standard Catalog of Smith and Wesson, but there is some overlap between years, and differences between when the frame was made, and when it shipped. If you have the box, look for the 'Spec Ord' number on the end, which will give you the Ordinal Calendar date that it shipped out. In my case, it's 0055, the 55th day of 1990. The first digit is the last digit of the year, and the other three are the day of that year. When you get your new gun, post the prefix letters, and I'll look it up for you. Mine is TET XXX. So what year would that make it, other than denoting a famous "New Year" in Vietnam history ...
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November 6th 2009 1:33 AM
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QUOTE (agtman @ November 5th 2009 6:24 PM)  Mine is TET XXX. So what year would that make it, other than denoting a famous "New Year" in Vietnam history ...  By the book, TETXXX looks like early 1990. Lots of serial ranges appear in 1989-90. Must have been great years for sales (or at least for production.)
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November 7th 2009 10:13 PM
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Hi JCole,
Picked up my 1006. Unfortunately, it did not come with the original box. The serial # starts with TEW55XX. Thanks for looking it up for me.
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November 7th 2009 11:21 PM
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QUOTE (chr123 @ November 7th 2009 4:13 PM)  Hi JCole,
Picked up my 1006. Unfortunately, it did not come with the original box. The serial # starts with TEW55XX. Thanks for looking it up for me. TEW = early 1990 As a matter of fact, the book says TEP all the way to TFA was April 1990, but there may be a couple of months of overlap or discrepancy. If you want to know the exacy ship date, and where it went, as well as the original configuration of the gun, you can request a letter from Smith and Wesson via their website. It costs $35 and takes a pretty long time since they stay backed-up. A phone call to customer service might get the ship date alone; I'm not sure.
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November 10th 2009 2:22 AM
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It costs $50 to letter a gun with S&W but I believe that if all you want is the shipping date, their customer service can give you that. Many folks want a manufacturing date for their Smith. Unfortunately, Smith has never tracked that information, only the shipping date. This is a problem with some less popular models such as the M58 because some on those may have sat on the warehouse shelves for a year or more before shipping. Similarly, guns were not shipped in numerical sequence so a gun with a lower serial number may have a somewhat later shipping date than one with a higher number.
Bruce
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November 11th 2009 8:57 PM
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QUOTE (JCole @ November 5th 2009 8:33 PM)  By the book, TETXXX looks like early 1990. Lots of serial ranges appear in 1989-90. Must have been great years for sales (or at least for production.) JCole: Oops, ... I goofed one digit. It's actually a 4-digit # that follows the prefix, as in TET XXXX. Sorry. Don't know if that changes the born-on year or not (?).
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November 11th 2009 9:03 PM
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QUOTE (JCole @ November 5th 2009 8:33 PM)  By the book, TETXXX looks like early 1990. Lots of serial ranges appear in 1989-90. Must have been great years for sales (or at least for production.) On the "great years for sales" point, that's within the 10mm's peak popularity years, which had begun with Colt's release of the Delta Elite in 1987, being quickly followed by other manufacturers, like S&W and Glock. Also, the FBI formally announced adoption of the cartridge and S&W's model 1076 in 1990, IIRC.
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November 11th 2009 9:51 PM
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QUOTE (agtman @ November 11th 2009 2:57 PM)  JCole: Oops, ... I goofed one digit. It's actually a 4-digit # that follows the prefix, as in TET XXXX. Sorry. Don't know if that changes the born-on year or not (?).  Nope, still the same, just a few pistols later.
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November 13th 2009 6:13 PM
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QUOTE (JCole @ November 11th 2009 4:51 PM)  Nope, still the same, just a few pistols later. Can you help on a 1st Gen 610 wheely? (If you can, it's BFA 29XX) Thanks!
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November 13th 2009 6:49 PM
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QUOTE (agtman @ November 13th 2009 12:13 PM)  Can you help on a 1st Gen 610 wheely? (If you can, it's BFA 29XX) Thanks!  Looks like 1990.
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November 15th 2009 12:32 AM
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TaosG ... Thanks!
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November 15th 2009 3:00 AM
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That baby must of been fresh off the assembly line!
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November 15th 2009 1:59 PM
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QUOTE (TaosGlock @ November 14th 2009 10:00 PM)  That baby must of been fresh off the assembly line!  Yeah, that's what I'm thinking, ... I lucked into a real early one (have had it now for some years). My well-dogged earred copy of the Am Handgunner's "Special Issue" devoted to the 10mm AUTO is dated Oct, 1991. The cover pic shows a 5" 610, along side Colt's DA "Double Eagle 10mm. And I knew some 610 wheelies had been in circulation before that issue hit the racks. Good to know.
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