S&W Performance Center Stocking Dealer SD9 and SD40

Ozzdog

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Hello,
I need to sell a pair of Smith & Wesson pistols. Both were made in 1994 and are the performance center stocking dealer SD9 (1 of 174) and the SD 40 (1 of 217). I have the boxes and paperwork and was curious about the best way to sell them. Any ideas?
I'm also curious of the value. They have some rounds through them but they are in excellent condition. No dings or scratches. Thanks
 
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Were they mine, for the very best return, I would list them on Gun Broker. Those are very high quality, and as you know, very low production guns. Their likes are never to be seen again from S&W. In fact, I don't believe the Performance Center, in the form that created those guns, even exists today.....
 
Oh it's even darker. Not only does the Performance Center no longer exist… there is nobody working for S&W now that was involved with the Performance Center as we know it. So it isn't only done and gone, there is also nobody in Springfield that has half a clue about the handguns that we love most.
 
The OP (or moderators?) might consider moving this thread to the next forum down the list: nonwithstanding the title of this forum, it really doesn't apply to the all metal Performance Center Gen 3 style gems he's interested in establishing a value for...

Probably get a lot more relevant responses from the experts who may not often peruse the SD/SIGMA forum...?

Cheers!

P.S. I know: never end a sentence with a proposition... I mean PREPOSITION!
 
^^You're wrong, extremely wrong, irrationally wrong, couldn't be wronger! :D

I have suggested or even asked for a Performance Center area and we are not getting one. But you cannot take the undisputed BEST semiautomatic handguns that Smith & Wesson ever made and relegate them to an area of junk tupperware that got the company sued, and justifiably so.
 
Okay, first of all, the SD9 or SD40 didn't exist in 1994, that would be the SW9F and SW40F. (The SD9 and SD40 weren't released until 2012.)
Second, to the best of my knowledge, there's no such thing as a Performance Center of any entry in the Sigma Series, so if such a thing does exist, then I would very much like to see it and would greatly appreciate it if you would be so kind as to upload some pics of these Performance Center Sigmas.

The closest thing to Performance Center Sigmas that I'm aware of are a few limited runs of special models like the SW9P with a Ported Slide/Barrel, but that wasn't a Performance Center model, the P stood for Ported.
 
Uh, the "next forum down the list" I referred to is called...

"Smith & Wesson Semi-Auto Pistols
____________________________________
Other Smith & Wesson Semi-Automatic Pistols from the 1950s to Present"

...which, I think, more accurately describes them...?

Cheers!
 
Oh yes, the Stocking Dealer compacts were released in 1994. (Page 464, 465 and 466 in the 4th edition) These are not your SDs of today. And I do believe the OP had them in the correct location and should not be in the same category as today's SD or Sigma. And yes, a Performance Center category should be added. Let's say from the beginning to maybe 2005 or 2006. The original SD40 and SD356.
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Joe
 
Ah, I see... These should be on the Smith & Wesson Semiauto Forum.

A Moderator ought to be able to fix that.
 
Oh yes, the Stocking Dealer compacts were released in 1994. (Page 464, 465 and 466 in the 4th edition) These are not your SDs of today. And I do believe the OP had them in the correct location and should not be in the same category as today's SD or Sigma.

Definitely.

Them some purty peestoles. :)

Look like LPA's on em...?
 
Bwahahaha this discussion got moved while it was being discussed and suggested to be moved. Mea Culpa, STORMINORMAN!

The Stocking Dealer guns often get mistaken for "SD" amd Sigma types due to the nomenclature. These pistols are obviously not plastic anywhere in any way, but they are so very rare that the mistake is made often when someone mentions them.

My SD is the SD-9 and it is sublime. It's more desirable than 25 Sigmas.
 
Can we get an explanation of what a "Stocking Dealer" is/was?
Apparently different from an ordinary (non-stocking?) dealer?

<cue mandatory stocking pics :rolleyes:>
 
Smith & Wesson decided to go forward with the Performance Center at some point in the very early 1990's... maybe 1990? Forgive me for lack of detailed accuracy. Exactly this stuff is the stuff that I crave but the details are seemingly non-existent. As best I can tell, the absolute details exist only the minds and memories of those good folks who were actually involved, or had working relationships with them.

The PC started with an idea to have a basic outline for a custom pistol and with a full menu of options where a buyer would commission a build, order it exactly how they wanted it and then the PC would go to work on it.

I believe that they figured out almost immediately that it wasn't a viable, profitable business model to do things that way, so they began coming up with models and hand fitting them, making maybe 150-300 examples and then they funneled them to distributors.

Most of us have heard of these distributors... the big guys like Sport South, Ellett Brothers, Lew Horton, Talo, RSR Wholesale and others whose name escapes me this moment.

A good example -- the 845 Limited. These went to Lew Horton. If you wanted an 845 Limited, you had to get it from Lew Horton. You couldn't get it from S&W and your dealer couldn't get it from S&W. Your dealer had to order it from Lew Horton.

Well the word from way back in the day was that alllllll the other much smaller dealers who had purchase agreements with S&W (but were nowhere near the size or scale of the BIG distributors) were getting annoyed or even angry that all of these amazing guns were trickling out of the Performance Center and none of the smaller dealers could get them unless they ordered from a big distributor such as RSR or Lew Horton.

The SD series (obviously now, the Performance Center "Stocking Dealer" series of pistols) included three models, the SD-9, SD-40 and the SD-356 and these were available exclusively to S&W dealers, likely larger retail stores but businesses that were much smaller than the huge wholesale distributors.

The SD pistols featured compact sized frames (6906) but made of stainless and not aluminum alloy, mated with a midsize, mid-length slide and barrel and the unique square muzzle design that also made an appearance on some of the later PPC-9 pistols.

Their size, the fact that they were all steel, the square muzzle and the radically different availability channel made these pistols a very interesting and unique subset of guns in the history of the Performance Center.

It's really only a two letter coincidence that every handful of months, someone mentions an SD-9 or SD-40 and other folks who aren't knee deep in Performance Center pistol lore honestly think they are talking about a polymer Sigma variant... which tends to make hardcore fans of the PC guns chortle and shoot beer from their nostrils.

Beyond the fact that the demise of the true Performance Center brings a tear to my eye... it's also a shame that while these three models are absolutely amazing, the PC didn't also make an SD-45. Had they done so, I think it would have distinguished itself as . THE . one of the four to own.

Alas, they did not. The SD-9 tends to be the most sought after, the SD-356 is obviously distinctive due to the capability and obscurity of the .356TS&W cartridge. The SD-40 comes in closely, but suffers from being a .40cal in an age where far too many like to treat it like a redheaded step child.

I don't wish to sound like I know it all, and I -HOPE- some corrections or additions can be made. I dig specifically this stuff more than anything in firearms, this is the center of my interest and passion. I constantly wish for a SCSW for only the PC guns, or a similar coffee table sized book that encompasses the absolute entire history of the Performance Center.

Every time I think of this, it feels like I'm going to have to write it.
 
Sevens pretty much summed the SD story up...... I got my SD-9 from a Retail "Dealer" that was also a Police Supply house in W. Pa. I actually got it used from a friend who worked there as he wanted to buy a Shorty-40 to carry.

500SD guns were built 179 in 9mm just over 200 in .40; the ballance around 100 .356s. The SD-9 was shipped with one 12rd mag and a 15rd mag with the +2 adaptor. Earlier 59 and 5906 mags were only 14 rds. hence the +2 vs +3 name

Mine was shot quite a bit in the 90s in IDPA and USPSA..... back then I/we had no idea how rare these were and they were great range guns..... and something John Wick would have loved to carry..... 12+1 with the first "+2 15 rd magazines"...... easy to carry 43 to 58rds on a stage.
 
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Thread drift ..................... if you like the SD-9 concept.

A FrankenSmith 6915 makes a good concealed carry "version" of the SD-9.

The SD-9 and the 6915 are a CCO ..... short butt (12+1) but give you a longer 4 inch slide/sight radius than the stock 6906.

A 6915 is a 6906 alloy frame mated to a 4" 915 upper. I built one about 10 years ago when I discovered how rare the SD guns were. Squidsix another member here also built one a few years back....... when he put it up for sale I snagged it... as I like a backup to any gun that get concealed carried.
 
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