
Summary
The Smith & Wesson Model 686 is a six- or seven-shot double-action revolver manufactured by Smith & Wesson and chambered for the .357 Magnum cartridge. It will chamber and fire .38 Special cartridges, as the .357 Magnum was developed from the .38 Special. The Magnum case is slightly longer to prevent such rounds from being chambered and fired in handguns chambered for the .38 Special. The 686 has been available with 2-1/2 in. (64 mm); 3 in.(76mm); 4 in. (102 mm); 5 in. (127 mm); 6 in. (153 mm); and 8-3/8 in. (214 mm) barrel lengths as standard models and other barrel lengths either by special order from S&W's Performance Center custom shop, or acquired from or built by after-market gunsmiths. The Performance Center made a limited number of 686 in .38 Super for competitive shooters.
Photo of a Smith & Wesson 686 firing a .38 Special round, taken with an ultra high speed flash (air-gap flash). Smith & Wesson introduced the Model 686 in 1981. It is the stainless steel version of the 586, which was a blued steel finish. It was chambered for .357 Magnum and .38 S&W Special +P calibers. They are available ported and unported with a choice of 6 or 7 round cylinders.
The Model 686 is based on S&W's K/L (medium) revolver frame. During the 1980s, Smith & Wesson developed its K/L-Frame line of .357 Magnums: the Model 581, Model 586, Model 681 and Model 686. The Models 581 and 681 have fixed sights, whereas the 586 and 686 use adjustable sights.
Powers and Stats
Tier: 9-C, higher with piercing damage
Name: Smith & Wesson Model 686
Origin: The Real World
Age: First batch was in production from 1981-1999. The newer batch has been in production since 2012
Classification: Double-action revolver
Wielders: Various
Attack Potency: Street level (Primarily chambered in .357 Magnum and .38 Special), higher with piercing damage
Speed: Subsonic+ to Transonic for .38 Special rounds (270-350 m/s). Supersonic with .357 Magnum rounds (380-440 m/s)
Range: Hundreds of Meters (91 meters)
Weaknesses: Immense recoil
Discussions
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