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Colt Agent Snubby “Parkerized”?

13K views 47 replies 23 participants last post by  waltesefalcon  
#1 ·
I found a nice little Colt Agent in .38 Special at my LGS. Looks like a early 80’s or so due to its underlug.

The grips are a little worn but overall, it looks like it is in good shape.

Weird thing is that it is parkerized. I didn’t know Colt made a parkerized revolver other than the MkV Peacekeeper or something like that.

I was a little turned off by the finish but a quick search shows that some indeed are.
I do like it because for one, it is a Colt but not sure if the price is ok. He is asking $435 and it seems like a fair price but just not sure about that for these snubbies.

So my questions are
Are they good, is the cost about right and did they indeed all come parkerized. The web has skoosh info on them so I’m having a few challenges finding out about them.

A lot of info on the Lawman, very little on the parkerized Agent.

Any help or info would be great! Figured I’d ask the experts!!!!😊
 
#3 ·
Parkerized guns were made for about three years in the 80s. They were cheaper alternatives of the high polish guns - Agent for Cobra with alloy frame and Commando Special for Detective Special with steel frame. Agent came with smooth wood grips versus checkered on the Cobra. At the asking price you are paying about retail if it’s a shooter without box. They get about $600 for new in box.
 
#4 ·
Above two posts about covered it. I always suspected they also parkerized some guns because this was the period when fit and finishing quality was sometimes horrible. But of course with the snubs it was to compete price wise with others on the market. I always liked these very plain guns, but see them priced too high now just because they have “Colt” stamped on them.
 
#5 ·
Two things were happening at that time - the union's strike, and the fact that no one ever saw the lesser-finished Charter Arms heave to on the horizon of the economy-minded potential buyer.

I remember seeing the first 'Commando Special' and immediately thought that Colt had sub-contracted to Charter Arms for new construction - as many did when the new 'Cobra' showed up recently.
 
#6 ·
Some of these parkerized guns are among the worst finished Colts I've ever seen...there seemed to be no attempt to polish out flaws in the metal and some looked like the metal was cracked. Any parts that would normally be considered blems were used. I've also seen some that looked excellent...very fine finish with a smooth parkerized coat. None of this takes anything away the utility of these revolvers...they were fully as functional and accurate and reliable as any.
 
#7 ·
It is definitely a little on the utilitarian side but a Colt none the less. This thing would look like an ugly step sister to my other Colts. I truly like the Colt “LE named” revolvers such Lawman, Border Patrol, Trooper, etc but Im just on the fence with this one. Especially at the price point.
 
#8 ·
I remember looking at one of those Commando Parkerized guns at a gun shop when they were newly released. The sideplate stood proud of the frame by about 2mm. It was at a time that the Detective Special was out of production.
I suppose for the right price it would make a fine truck gun and in today's market $400 or so isn't totally out of line.

I seem to recall reading a review in one of the gun rags at the time and it stated that the interior of the barrel was also Parkerized but had brightened up after they fired a couple hundred rounds out of it during testing.
 
#38 ·
I'm trying to recall where I saw a mid-1980's cover-story magazine-article about a particular black revolver. The magazine recommended the gun for those "on a 'beer drinker's budget.'"

I'm believing the magazine was probably Combat Handguns, and the firearm was probably a Colt Commando, Agent, or a parkerized CA Off Duty. I know this is like looking for a needle in a haystack, but might anyone remember this particular article?
 
#15 ·
This is right up there with the worst I have ever seen. I put a Tyler grip and Colt shroud on it to distract from the horrible finish. Look at the frame below the cylinder. Mfg. 1983. Shoots great.
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That finish!!! Jeez it kills me! Most Colts, especially if you shoot, there is usually a score line around the cylinder but haven’t really noticed it on these parkerized ones. Is it noticeable? Kind of hard to tell if it was abuse do to the finish!!!
 
#35 ·
Doing some research, my Agent Letters as one of a 6 gun shipment to Clark Hardware of Nashville TN, dated July 18, 1956. The photo shows my Agent's shortened grip. Colt Fever, Gun Digest and Wiki show the introduction as 1955. Previous threads here in the Forum show a number of other members with Agents starting in 1955 - 60. I don't think this is a Colt grey area, just someone picking up an incorrect 1962 date and it carried on.
 

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