well considering the width of the cylinder, no they aren't any wider
the only thing I would point out is that square guns print more
I personally like the flatest possible gun.
my personal carry next to a nitecore D10 and Robeson ShurEdge early 43 production
well considering the width of the cylinder, no they aren't any wider
the only thing I would point out is that square guns print more
I personally like the flatest possible gun.
my personal carry next to a nitecore D10 and Robeson ShurEdge early 43 production

the gun measure 1.02 at the widest point
it's very big, but very flat
it matches the heaviest 180gr handload in a 357 with a six inch barrel
and it does it with 4 more rounds, a larger diameter bullet, one inch less barrel, and half the width
180gr Gold Dot @ 1350+ = 700 pounds of head splattering fun
It's too much by far for most people (including the FBI) but I can shoot it very well and it hits like Mjollnir.

It also takes me far beyond defense and into the realm of an offensive handgun.
I'm an offensive guy right? Why shouldn't my gun match?
I believe those were all polymer frame guns so the frame will be black, grey, green, desert, etc.
The silver slides are usually stainless
some stainless are coated to whatever color, usually black
some coated slides are carbon steel, and hence the coating
some carbon steel slides are blued, and you can tell these right off