Hey TrooperJoe, I bought the same gun last summer.
There were only two 6"ers in the country when I finally found the one I bought.
What I like about it-
The octagonal barrel is snazzy. The bluing is so dark it looks black, mine has no booboos on it. The sights are modern target jobs. The lockup is absolutely solid, no slop I can detect. Timing is excellent. The bolt is held away from the cylinder and after 140 rounds there is no sign of scratching. <This is a biggee for me, I always notice those scratches. The action feels a bit heavy but it is really smooth. I think it shoots well, prints decent groups but I'm old and the eyes aren't what they should be so my shooting is not good. The trigger is very good, almost too light. The cylinder click stops right where you need it to, the ejector, gate and chambers all lined up.
Where it needs improvement- Like you, I noticed the rear sight el adjustment is too easy to move, and so far it still shoots a little high even when the sight is cranked down flat so I hold for it. It shoots to the left a little but I think that's my fault, being out of practice. All my revolvers seem to shoot a tad left.
The cylinder pin seems a little spindly for full house magnum loads.
It has the firing pin transfer bar in the hammer, which annoys some but I don't mind it since it may keep me from shooting my foot off some day.
The one piece grips seem fat toward the bottom from what I'm used to.
I tried some 225 grain Hornady factory .44 magnums and good grief that thing is snappish. It startled me and I shot 40 rounds trying to get used to it but only got tired. I put some 180 grain Remingtons through it, same results.
Switching to .44 specials made it seem like a cadillac. Smooth, fun, consistent. At my age I think I'll either load some moderate .44 magnums myself or just shoot hot specials out of it. It weighs 39 oz but acts like a much smaller gun.
Specials from now on.
Yup.
Love that gun though.