MarshallDodge
Member
How well do they holdup? Is Sig still supporting them?
Swiss SIG P210's were imported into Germany by Hämmerli Tiengen and can also be considered SIG Hammerlis. In my experience the Swiss guns, whether it's a P210 of some kind, Hämmerli, or a P240 are very well made and hold up well - maybe with the exception of the P240 in .38 Special WC. The P240 in .38 had a bad reputation among shooters.
SIG Neuhausen and Hammerli Lenzburg, the original manufacturers, are no longer supporting the guns.
Yes, the Trailside is what I was referring to. Is a field grade model in very good condition worth $500? It comes with five mags.MarshallDodge
Do you mean something like the Sig-Hammerli Trailside? I have one, the 4" barrel and fixed sights version, and it's very accurate with a truly light trigger. I use mainly Wolf Match Target and CCI Standard Velocity ammo with it.
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Gunbroker says that the price is good.the Trailside is what I was referring to. Is a field grade model in very good condition worth $500? It comes with five mags.
Why should P210 be considered "SIG / Hämmerli" because only because(???) Hämmerli was at some timettime (???) company that imported them to Germany??...
P240 is SIG + Hämmerli as far as it goes. .
Because they are marked Hammerli, Tiengen.
So they were made in both factories, is that what you are saying???
The Air Marshall is not importable, it was not made in Germany nut manufactured in the U.S.A!It's like the Korth revolvers sold under the Nighthawk label now. All those wheelguns are made by Korth in Germany. None are made by Nighthawk.
Not true. Federal law and ATF regs require the firearm to be marked with the manufacturers information as well as the name and city of the U.S. importer.You can mark whatever you want when you import it.
And............."Uberti" is rollmarked somewhere on that firearm.Look at all the SAA replicas that are sold in the USA and are made in Italy.
All the companies that import them to the USA print the most fancy names on it. But in the end they are UBERTI revolvers.
When referring to a foreign firearm imported into the US it's common to put a "/" between the manufacturers name and the US importer.Let's say you live in USA and drive a Volkswagen.
The company that imported your car is (purely invented here) "Miller cars".
Use it now a Volkswagen/Miller???
No way it is.
It's still a Volkswagen.
And................."Korth" is stamped on every single one.It's like the Korth revolvers sold under the Nighthawk label now. All those wheelguns are made by Korth in Germany. None are made by Nighthawk.
Do you mean Sky Marshal? I've not heard of a Korth Air Marshal (and Marshall is a city in Texas )..... The Air Marshall with the 2" barrel is not importable as a whole gun under the GCA, minimum barrel length for a revolver is 3"....
Badly translated webpages? If I had not learnt German in the Bundeswehr, I would have learnt it at the Universität Hamburg.Ta! Got enough friends, don't need any more.
Maybe what I really meant was lost somewhere in my knowledge of the English language - it's not my native language.
Or maybe you don't want to understand?
My intention was to offer you to discuss this interesting matter not in the OPs thread but somewhere else.
But meanwhile I saw that you have your knowledge about a Swiss gun from some badly translated webpages.
You see, there's nothing to learn for me from your second hand knowledge