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Post by TA on Feb 7, 2006 0:23:50 GMT -5
This a recent aquisition. I bought this used from a private party. He claimed that he fired it 12 times and then put it away. By the looks of it, I believe him. The typical "smiley" wear marks on the barrel are nearly nonexistent. This gun is like new at a considerable savings from retail $.
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Post by MLB on Feb 7, 2006 11:34:28 GMT -5
Certainly looks new to me. Nice find!
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Post by "DoubleAction" on Feb 7, 2006 22:09:14 GMT -5
TA; The roll pin on the slide, for the breech block, leaves me to believe that this 220 of yours is also one manunfactured in West Germany.
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Post by TA on Feb 8, 2006 0:49:18 GMT -5
DA, According to Sig, that gun left the factory in 2002. The slide says "Made in Germany".
What is about the roll pin that caught your attention?
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Post by TMan on Feb 8, 2006 6:33:14 GMT -5
Hmmm, I'm not getting a picture. According to the URL it is at: img.photobucket.com/albums/v77/thoallen/P220.jpg which must be a site that the People's Republic must find offensive. I'll look at it when I return to the wonderful state of Texas. Sure glad I don't live in the People's Republic of California.
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Post by "DoubleAction" on Feb 10, 2006 18:26:53 GMT -5
DA, According to Sig, that gun left the factory in 2002. The slide says "Made in Germany". What is about the roll pin that caught your attention? TA; The solid stainless slides are manufactured in the U.S., as where the steel stamped slides were manufactured in Germany. I've noticed that the stainless slides have solid pins retaining the breech block, unlike the roll pins which were common with the steel stamped slides from Germany.
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