did a small kine comparison over the weekend on 3 revolvers:
Colt Cobra, Ruger GP100 Wiley Clapp, S&W 627
comparison is mostly on the trigger/action, how it shoots/feels, size of revolver and capacity. since I went silhouette side, accuracy wasn't taken into consideration
i'll give a short summary of each revolver:
Colt Cobra: its 38 special, 6 shots. trigger and action are very good, I give it second place in back of the S&W 627. with rubber grip feels good to shoot, although cannot get your pinky on the grip, but its 38 special so recoil isn't really a problem. the revolver is small enough to put in your pocket, so its very concealable.
Ruger GP100 Wiley Clapp: 357, 6 shots. I did a Wolff spring upgrade on it, 12 lbs mainspring/hammer spring and 10 lbs trigger return spring. these are the heaviest springs in the kit, I could go lighter later if I want. the trigger/action is better than factory but still its the heaviest of the 3 revolvers I shot on this day. GP100 was the most comfortable to shoot, bc of the full rubber grip, can shoot 357's all day long with this revolver. size is right in the middle of the Colt and S&W, but it would be hard to carry this in anything other than OWB
S&W 627: 8 shots of 357, takes moonclips. trigger and action are the best among the revolvers I shot on this day, very smooth. factory grips were painful to shoot, could not get my pinky on the grip, it was very painful on the web of my right hand between thumb and trigger finger. switched it to Altamont grips that are slightly bigger, got my pinky on it, and its waaaaay better now. it is the biggest revolver of the 3, so OWB is probably the only way to carry this.
each one has its place. if you need small, go with the Cobra. if you need capacity and moon clips, go with the 627. if you want something in the middle, go with the GP100. hard to pick an overall winner bc they each have a specialty that makes them standout
these are the new Altamont grips: (Altamont grips always fit great, and look great. I think I have 3 or 4 sets of Altamonts)

