A Korth Classic revolver in .357 Magnum with a made-to-order 5.25 inch barrel and deep black polish. Gold-plated controls, walnut target grips, and full factory documentation.
Pick this Korth up and the first thing you notice is the weight, then the polish. The deep black finish on this Classic runs so glossy you can read reflections off the cylinder flutes, and against that mirror surface the gold-plated trigger, hammer, ejector rod, and frame screws read like jewelry. This is a Korth built the way the German shop has built revolvers for decades, one gun at a time, each one signed off by the gunsmith who made it and the inspector who approved it.
The factory tag tells the real story here. It lists the barrel as 5.25 inches, not the round six the listing name suggests. That is worth knowing because Korth barrel lengths are made to order rather than pulled from a bin, and a 5.25 inch Classic in .357 Magnum is not a length you stumble across. The barrel wears the full target profile with a ventilated rib and a heavy underlug, and it carries the Korth Germany Waffenfabrik roll mark along the left side.
The grips are a set of contoured walnut target panels with the Korth name and a Jim Wilson signature burned into the wood. They fill the hand the way a competition grip should, swelling at the heel and palmswell. Up top sits an adjustable target rear paired with a serrated ramp front, and the red cabochon set into the cylinder release adds the one bit of color the black and gold scheme allows.
The cylinder swings out clean on a hand-fitted crane, the six chambers cut and chamfered, the bore bright. What you are holding is a current-production Korth in a made-to-order configuration, cased with its factory paperwork and tools. For a collector who wants German revolver work at its peak, this one delivers it without compromise.
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