Differences between King cobra & Python

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  • joem
    Senior Member, Deceased
    • Aug 2009
    • 11835

    #1

    Differences between King cobra & Python

    Can anyone tell me the difference between the colt king cobra and the colt python. I've ckecked the write up in wkipedia and it's still a bit unclear. They are both .357 mag but other than that, what makes them different? Simple explanation please.
  • da gimp
    Very Senior Member - OFC Deceased
    • Aug 2009
    • 10137

    #2
    By far. the Colt Python is the best revolver originating in a US factory & thus the world in the 20th century.......the only other revolvers that come even close to its superior action, timing and finish are the S&W registered .357 magnums, the S&W pre-27 .357 magnums & the early S&W mod 27 .357 magnums, even die hard S&W fanatics (I am one) agree to this...........I also own a Colt Python that I purchased from a retired LEO back in the 1980's & it is cherished by my lady too............

    The King Cobra/Anacondas are at best a lesser grade revolver....... with much less hand fitting of the action & finish........... people trying to sell them often flog them as equals to the Python........ & it ain't so........I'd rate them as equals only to the Troopers.........a good revolver in it's own right. but it ain't a Python either.

    If you can afford a Python or better yet several 5 or 6 of them......... in mint or near mint condition...... ah hell even NRA exc.......... buy em & through them into the safe & shoot one.......... their actions & triggers are like breaking glass........I carry a Colt agt snubby every day........with back up a S&W mod 36 to it...... but they are not pythons..... nor is their values.

    take care lil bro............. & buy the Python...........
    be safe, enjoy life, journey well
    da gimp
    OFC, Mo. Chapter

    Comment

    • joem
      Senior Member, Deceased
      • Aug 2009
      • 11835

      #3
      I have a fully engraved plated king Cobra and I can't tell you how it shoots, if the trigger pull is good or if it's accurate. The cylinder hasn't been turned and I'll think I'll keep it that way. I'm also a S&W fan. I have a Mod 25 that's not had the cylinder turned either and a couple of others that are not to be fired. I do keep a eye out for a python. The Trouper was refinished and looks like new, it doesn't get fired either.

      Comment

      • da gimp
        Very Senior Member - OFC Deceased
        • Aug 2009
        • 10137

        #4
        the earlier the better on the Python on paying the most $........... but condition is important too......... if you were closer.I'd let you shoot mine. clover leafs at 25 yds off hand are common.
        be safe, enjoy life, journey well
        da gimp
        OFC, Mo. Chapter

        Comment

        • PhillipM
          Very Senior Member - OFC
          • Aug 2009
          • 5937

          #5
          Coltfever is way better than wiki for Colt revolvers. http://www.coltfever.com/King_Cobra.html
          Phillip McGregor (OFC)
          "I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthur

          Comment

          • Tuna
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 2686

            #6
            I can remember when a gun shops in my area couldn't get rid of a Python as no one wanted one. Back then at least one police department used them as issued weapons but after two years traded them in on new S&W model 66 revolvers in .357 magnum. The big problem with the Python was it was all hand fitted by Colt in the custom shop. They had a rep of being delicate and breakage was not unknown with them. A real pretty gun and it could shoot well but it could not stand the test of hard use it seems. Today the Python seems to have become more of a high priced collector item then anything else. The King Cobra was a standard production model and no hand fitting with it. It will never have the value of the Python but I think it very well may be the more durable of the two.
            Last edited by Tuna; 11-25-2014, 10:33.

            Comment

            • barretcreek
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2013
              • 6065

              #7
              Python is a hundred year old design, King Cobra is only twenty years old. Python is fragile but wonderful. KC is tough and would benefit from handfitting. I have an "E" series Python and it stays in the safe. The Smiths get the workout.

              Comment

              • joem
                Senior Member, Deceased
                • Aug 2009
                • 11835

                #8
                Thanks Phillip. I'll try calling colt after the holidays.

                Comment

                • Art
                  Senior Member, Deceased
                  • Dec 2009
                  • 9256

                  #9
                  Originally posted by barretcreek
                  Python is a hundred year old design, King Cobra is only twenty years old. Python is fragile but wonderful. KC is tough and would benefit from handfitting. I have an "E" series Python and it stays in the safe. The Smiths get the workout.
                  +1.

                  The old Colts were extremely smooth, the Python was the smoothest of them all, the action makes them a dream to shoot. They, like Gimp says, are probably the gold standard of revolvers along with, as he said, the older Registered Magnums. The fact that the Smith's were more durable with actions that, while not up to Colt standards were smooth enough and generally cost less money, sometimes a lot less is why the Smith & Wessons slowly beat out the Colts in the professional market.

                  A Python is a true monument to a buygone age of steel and walnut hand fitted, hand polished firearms. At its time it was the finest available but the finest just got to be too expensive to manufacture.

                  Smith & Wesson still makes the Model 27 but the workmanship on the new versions is only a pale reflection of the quality of workmanship on a Model 27-2, much less a Registered Magnum or pre Model 27 postwar guns.
                  Last edited by Art; 11-27-2014, 07:17.

                  Comment

                  • da gimp
                    Very Senior Member - OFC Deceased
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 10137

                    #10
                    Smith & Wesson giving LEO's major price breaks on duty & off duty pistols helped a bunch too............ when everyone saw near 90% of police officers with S&W...... it helped drive civilian sales too..... Colt didn't care. they had the M16 contract with the military & for the most part Colt just didn't care about any other models selling..........
                    be safe, enjoy life, journey well
                    da gimp
                    OFC, Mo. Chapter

                    Comment

                    • Art
                      Senior Member, Deceased
                      • Dec 2009
                      • 9256

                      #11
                      Originally posted by da gimp
                      Smith & Wesson giving LEO's major price breaks on duty & off duty pistols helped a bunch too............ when everyone saw near 90% of police officers with S&W...... it helped drive civilian sales too..... Colt didn't care. they had the M16 contract with the military & for the most part Colt just didn't care about any other models selling..........
                      Probably the last really serious attempt by Colt to compete in the LEO revolver market were the later Troopers (Mk III) and Detective Specials produced in the late 1960s - early 1970s. They were very nice guns but the Smiths were cheaper and more durable, heavy on the cheaper. I worked with a couple of guys who had the later D.S. as personally owned duty guns and they were beautiful guns with very smooth actions, but even the guys who bought their own were buying Chiefs at the rate of at least 3-1 over the Colts. The Border Patrol bought a bunch of Troopers at one time but the Patrol after a brief flirtation with the Troopers went back to Model 19s and eventually on to their last issue revolver, Ruger .357s. The Rugers were great duty revolvers, robust, reliable and accurate, though their actions felt a bit funky to someone who cut their teeth on Smiths and Colts, but by the time the old INS adopted them for the Patrol and Special Agents the day of the revolver as a law enforcement tool was nearly over, they were obsolescent almost from the day they were introduced. But since the Border Patrol back then was said to have "50 years of tradition uninterrupted by progress" they kept wheel guns much longer than other agencies, hanging onto them as issue weapons well into the 90s.
                      Last edited by Art; 11-27-2014, 09:31.

                      Comment

                      • da gimp
                        Very Senior Member - OFC Deceased
                        • Aug 2009
                        • 10137

                        #12
                        I still carry a Colt Agt. parkerized snub day to day... with a good lil S&W 36 blued snub as a back-up reload gun........... the agt is a direct descent of the Colt DS & then the Cobra.............but with the aluminum frame... it restricts 90% or better loads to be 750fps LWC's ...... with heavy carry loads practiced with sparingly......but the good little Chief's Spec gets the same diet......... On these lil snubs. it's far easier to draw a second pistol, than it is to reload.........

                        as an aside I'd bought it for my late mother in law after she opened an antique shop & started doing the bigger shows............ she'd always been anti-gun until her first grandkid was born...... ours.. then when she started to complain about my carry pieces & her middle son..... Ranger/Delta / 5thSF... I asked her how she was ever going to protect the baby if the need ever arised......... 2 days later she was up at the farm.... learning to shoot pistols, revolvers, pump 20 ga's & CAR 15 .223's............. & became quite adept.......... it turned out that her dad.... a WWI vet had taught her the basics back in the 1930's. but my point is this... if you can trigger that wonderful protective mother instinct.. we've got another pro-gun lady.. who will in turn help us convert more.
                        Last edited by da gimp; 11-27-2014, 04:07.
                        be safe, enjoy life, journey well
                        da gimp
                        OFC, Mo. Chapter

                        Comment

                        • PhillipM
                          Very Senior Member - OFC
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 5937

                          #13
                          I wouldn't call them weak or delicate. Let Grant Cunningham explain: http://www.grantcunningham.com/blog_..._delicate.html

                          There is an assertion that comes up with surprising frequency, particularly in the internet age where everyone is an expert: the Colt Python (and all other Colt revolvers) are "delicate", "go out of time easily", or "not as strong/durable as a S&W."

                          Let's start with the construction: a Colt revolver, for any given frame size, is as strong as any gun with that frame size. Their metallurgy is absolutely the best, and their forged construction is of superior quality. They are superbly made, and their longevity is a testimony to that fact. You are never compromising when you choose a Colt!

                          How about the charge of "delicate" or "goes out of time easily"? In my work, I see a lot of Colts; I shoot them extensively myself. With proper maintenance, I've seen no tendency for any Colt to go out of time. Yet, the rumors persist!

                          Why do such opinions exist if there wasn't some basis to them? Is there some amount of truth? I think I can answer that!

                          Let's start with some facts: Colt revolvers have actions which are very refined. Their operating surfaces are very small, and are precisely adjusted to make the guns work properly. Setting them up properly is not a job for someone who isn't intimately familiar with their workings, and the gunsmith who works on them had better be accustomed to working at narrow tolerances, on small parts, under magnification.

                          Colt's design and construction is unique; it uses the hand (the "pawl" which rotates the cylinder) and the bolt (the stop at the bottom of the frame opening) to hold the cylinder perfectly still when the gun fires. The action is designed so that the hand - which is the easiest part to replace - will take the majority of the wear, and is expected to be changed when wear exceeds a specific point.

                          This is considered normal maintenance in a Colt revolver, which is not the case with any other brand. To get their famous "bank vault" cylinder locking and attendant accuracy, you have to accept a certain amount of maintenance; it goes with ownership of such a fine instrument.

                          I've often made the statement that a Colt is like a Ferrari; to get the gilt-edged performance, you have to accept that they will require more maintenance than a Ford pickup. Unlike gun owners, however, folks who own Italy's finest don't complain that they are more "delicate" than an F-150!

                          I truly think that the negative reputation that Colts have in some quarters is because their owners - unschooled in the uniqueness of the Colt action - apply the same standards of condition that they would to their more pedestrian S&W guns.

                          What standards? A Colt, when the trigger is pulled and held back, should have absolutely no cylinder rotation. None, zip, zilch - absolutely no movement at all! Not a little, not a bit, not a smidgen - zero movement. A S&W, on the other hand, normally has a bit of rotational play - which is considered absolutely normal and fine.

                          There's another measurement to consider: at rest, a Colt cylinder should move front-to-back no more than .003" (that's 3/1,000 of an inch.) This is - in the absolute worst case - about half of the allowable S&W movement!

                          Now, let's say a S&W owner, used to their looser standards of cylinder lockup, buys a Colt. He goes and shoots it a bit, and the hand (which probably has a bit of wear already, as he bought it used) is approaching the normal replacement interval. He checks his gun, and finds that the cylinder has just the slightest amount of movement when the trigger is back, and half of his S&W's longitudinal travel. Heck, he thinks, it's still a lot tighter than his Smith so it must be fine to keep shooting it.

                          WRONG! It's at this point that he should stop shooting, and take it to an experienced Colt gunsmith to have the action adjusted. Of course, he doesn't do this - he keeps shooting. The cylinder beats harder against the frame, compresses the ratchet (ejector), causing the hand to wear even faster, and the combination of the two leads to a worn bolt. If left unchecked, the worn bolt can do damage to the rebound lever. When it finally starts spitting lead and misfiring, he takes it in and finds to his astonishment that he's facing a $400 (or more!) repair bill, and perhaps a 6 month wait to find a new ratchet.

                          Of course, he'll now fire up his computer and declare to anyone who will listen that Colts are "delicate" and "go out of time easily" and are "hard to get parts for." That, folks, appears to be the true origin of these fallacies.

                          Colts do require more routine maintenance, and a more involved owner; that's a fact. But, as long as the maintenance is performed properly, a Colt will happily digest thousands upon thousands of rounds without complaint. The owners who take care of them will be rewarded with a gun that is a delight to shoot, wonderfully accurate, and visually unmatched. Those who don't will sell them off at a loss and complain on the internet.

                          I sincerely hope that you will choose to be the first type of Colt owner. If, however, you are the second, please drop me a note - I'm always in the market for Colt revolvers at fire-sale prices!
                          Phillip McGregor (OFC)
                          "I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthur

                          Comment

                          • Tuna
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 2686

                            #14
                            Phillip, I have over 30K rounds through my S&W 686 of which 5K are .357 Magnums. The trigger pull is like glass and even better then a Python. It just kept getting smoother with shooting. My total maintenance on my 686? ZERO!!!!!! I do have a friend who has a 4" Python. It just sits in his safe. Maintenance on the Python requires a smith to hand fit the part to it which I must assume is not a cheap thing to have done as I have not yet found what I would call a good smith at cheap prices. Yes S&W revolvers have more play in them to start with but they are like comparing an AR to an AK The S&W is like the AK. You know it's going to work when you pull the trigger.

                            Comment

                            • PhillipM
                              Very Senior Member - OFC
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 5937

                              #15
                              I have a 586 I don't ever plan to get rid of, too, Tuna! It does it's job well!
                              Phillip McGregor (OFC)
                              "I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthur

                              Comment

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