

The barrel, cylinder, triggerguard and frame are stainless steel polished to a bright, glossy finish that’s as shiny as chrome plating. The Charter Arms Off Duty has a finish that looks good in hand. Jerry Miculek’s IDPA revolver is a stock S&W 625 JM tweaked with a green HiViz front sight, a Bowen white outline rear sight, a bobbed hammer and Miculek’s smooth, hardwood grips. Bat Masterson special ordered a Colt SAA with a nickel finish, gutta-percha grips and requested that it be “light on the trigger.” Colonel Jeff Cooper’s 1911 is sort of a parts gun with a Commander-style hammer, an arched/checkered mainspring housing and an ivory grip with a water buffalo etched into it. Thanks for pointing that out Flash.Firearms are a reflection of our personality and character. Well OK, so I should have read the manual. So is it a Undercover or a Undercoverette ? And when was it made ? The barrel is about 1 1/4 inches long so I'm guessing it's the 2 inch barrel model I have been reading about on the web. Trigger guard and handle frame look like there aluminum. It's a nice old gun, looks like it's well made. I see some on the web going for $300 in good condition, this one looks like new. Price sticker says "List Price 173.00", "Our Price 164.95". The box is a generic Charter Arms box with a sticker on one flap with "Charter 2 38 SPL" and the serial number printed on it. I'm guessing she and my father both shot 5 rounds when they bought it at a local gunshop (I know that shop had a range). There was also a box of bullets with 10 missing. I found it in it's original box (with wax paper) wrapped in newspaper. This was my mothers gun and I'm guessing she bought it in the mid 70's. The back page has a picture of a "Undercoverette" and it looks exactly the same. As you can see in the scans the manual says "Undercover" and shows an exact image of the gun I have. Not sure if this is a Undercover or a Undercoverette.
