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Browning
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Last month I found this minty, seemingly unfired, 1969C Browning High Power 9mm at a LGS and had to add it to my 9mm shooting arsenal. :)
I have this thing for European 9mms. After a range trip and 150 perfectly cycled and tightly grouped rounds, we are now good friends. |
Congrats Eugen.
I'm looking at the hi power too. Haven't found the right one yet. |
Polished blue steel, timeless design, and finely checkered, perfectly fitted walnut grips... it just doesn't get any better than that! :thumbup:
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Do you have the original grips, or just this pair? Does this BHP still have the mag disconnect still in place, or has it been removed to improve the trigger pull? A nice looking 69C.....they are great shooters!!!
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Considering the time frame, I would say the commander has a BHP style hammer. :D On the other hand. Your Northern neighbours have boat loads of the thing you long for, some of them never issued. But they are most likely going to destroy them. :mad: |
BHP and 1911 are definitely great guns. Personally, I like BHP a little bit more.
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I did want one with the hammer ring as it is so classy. 1969 was the last year for those. |
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However, I wanted a shooter and not a more valuable (read: expensive) collector model, at least for this purchase. But, I can dream. |
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Same with Norwegian .45 M1911's...Or 1914's, whatever the Norwegians called them... :p I own an Argentine Model 1927 but I don't consider that a collectible either... :) |
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FWIW, I once owned a new commercial FN produced HP with the round commander type hammer, the tangent rear sight, but without the frame being slotted for the shoulder stock (the reason I eventually sold it)... I didn't feel that the sights were an improvement for an un-stocked pistol. As I recall, I traded it for a NIB Colt Gold Cup National Match .45, which strangely enough, I also no longer own :surr: |
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I always though the HP35 as the ultimate FN Browning design.
I managed to get a WWII era made under German occupation (sorry, they are collectable) and a T-Series made in the early 60s - I still kept both. |
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A customer turned in one of those Portuguese assembled FNs to me and asked me to put tritium sights on it, and I test fired it after I was done. First two rounds at 7-8 yards were really disappointing, I thought I only hit the target with one round. I fired a third and a fourth round with the same result: No more holes so I thought I missed the target entirely. Then I walked up to have a closer look, and found that the hole in the target was a very tight clover leaf, so all four round have actually hit the same hole. After I had the sights adjusted correctly I shot another two rounds at 15 yards, and I think the picture speaks for itself.
I tried to buy this gun from the customer, but he said "out of my cold, dead hands". Those Hi-Powers are amazing guns. |
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The BHP is my favorite shooter pistol. The first one I ever saw belonged to a friend who owned a small general store. I used to watch the store for him when I was teenager and he kept an old wartime HP under under the counter. I noticed it fit my hand really well. Several years later I bought a new one and never regretted it. Mine has the "epoxy" finish that Browning started using in the 80's. I was skeptical about how it would wear but almost ~30 years and thousands of rounds later it still looks almost new. I still keep my eyes open for a reasonably priced tangent sight model. |
Does anyone know why the FN/Herstal Hi-Powers had the *inside* of the grips painted red??? :confused:
When fitted to the pistol, the red color was not visible...So why paint them??? :rolleyes: |
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I like hi powers. Lucky for me that Mauser sold a rip-off in the early 1990s :)
Courtesy of FEG I must add. |
Vlim, those FEGS are very nice. I like them. I was not aware that there was a Mauser labeled model. I think that is cool. :thumbup:
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Here is my recent pawn shop find. A search of the serial indicates an early, post war date of about 1950. The finish is original, although I am sure the grips are replacements, due to their almost new condition.
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