Due to a number of factors, the .41 Magnum unfortunately never became the "next great police loading" that its developers and supporters envisioned. First, the majority of departments and rank and file officers were perfectly content with their traditional
.38 Special revolvers, and if more stopping power was needed, cartridges such as the popular
.357 Magnum were available. Although the .41 Magnum was adopted as a police departmental standard by a few cities, such as
Amarillo and
San Antonio, TX, and
San Francisco, CA, most chose to pass. In addition, introduced in the shadow of its
limelight-grabbing "big brother", the .44 Magnum Model 29, the Model 57 struggled from its onset to garner much
market share. The .41 Magnum's bullet (at 0.410″) is only 0.019″ smaller than the destined-for-greatness .44 Magnum (at 0.429″). The popularity gap widened further when
Clint Eastwood used a "most powerful handgun in the world", Model 29, in the popular film
Dirty Harry. Following the film's release, many handguns that were contemporaries of the .44 Magnum—such as the .41—began to lose popularity with the general public and within the American firearms market. Finally, a series of hugely popular and successful lighter and smaller-framed revolvers crafted from
stainless steel emerged in the mid-1980s. These police-issue oriented firearms, exemplified by models such as the
S&W Model 66, accelerated the Model 57's demise. Overall, the Model 57 and its variants failed to generate the interest (or
sales) which had been hoped for. ==Variants==