I really like the lines of the internal extractor Hi Powers. The roll pin in the slides of post '62s drives me nuts.

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The LGS just bought a collection of BHPs. There is one made in 1975, 1988 and the others all built between 2009 and 2014. All have the boxes except the two older ones and are all unfired. I'm trying to decide which one to get, I'm leaning towards one of the older ones just because they are beautiful and in perfect condition. There are a couple of combat models but the rest all have target sights.
Would the newer models shoot better because of all the updates or does it matter and just go with one of the older ones just because they are beautiful?
I did a little photo shoot with my HP this afternoon, and this is what I came up with!
Hey, I wanna play! Here is my HP Practical, best 9mm ever built IMHO!
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The LGS just bought a collection of BHPs. There is one made in 1975, 1988 and the others all built between 2009 and 2014. All have the boxes except the two older ones and are all unfired. I'm trying to decide which one to get, I'm leaning towards one of the older ones just because they are beautiful and in perfect condition. There are a couple of combat models but the rest all have target sights.
Would the newer models shoot better because of all the updates or does it matter and just go with one of the older ones just because they are beautiful?
I until I wrote to the NRA to identify it. I foolishly sold it; I believe it wound up in Bill Drollinger's collection sometime after that.
You can really see the BHP's linage in the present day CZ's
Nicely done. I like the gun not sure I am a fan of the caption.
Thanks!
I wrote that half in jest, fully expecting a verbal caning from some of our more staunch 1911 fans!
Now, if I was really brave, I'd post it over at the 1911 forum!
And BTW, that was an excellent write-up on the HP. I knew that Saive had designed it with him, and put the finishing touches on it, but I didn't know the rest of the story. It also explains why my FAL gets along so well with my Model 94, they're distantly related!
Wednesday, while browsing a local gun board, I found a Practical, fixed sights, in 9mm.
511mw serial number puts it at 2004 manufacture. He has the plastic box, all the paper work, Browning rug, 5xPractical mags and 1 15rd Mecgar. It is mine this Saturday!
If you shoot the BHP with the internal extractor please be careful. It will break. It is a weak point in the design. It is not a matter of if it is a matter of when it will break.
Replacements are hard to come by these days. If you can find one you are looking at $50-$75 for the part alone and that is if you can find one.
There is rumor that someone is making new ones but I have yet to see them on the market.
Nice pistols just be cautious.
I'll dispute that on the internal extractor. my old duty gun was a 1st year production stack number High power with a S&W K frame adjustable rear sight melted into the slide....and a nice higher front sight too. I've put somewhere between 6000 to 8000 rounds thru that pistol, most a 115 gr truncicated cone RCBS cast bullet over a stout load of Unique and duty loads of a Hornady JHP over the same load of Unique....& have never had a problem with it.........Nor have I heard of any friend with one ever having problems with theirs either.
The original internal extractor of the BHP is of the same wonderful style as those found on 99% of all 1911 & 1911A1 .45 ACP pistols ..... it is just as reliable as those...........I refuse to buy any 1911A1 that has the so called "modern external extractor" as it cannot be replaced or easily cleaned by the owner/shooter as those found on the original BHP's & Colt 1911's.
To clean the original design, a ball point ink pen is required , to clean this mis-begotten ill designed external extractor requires a particular sized roll pin punch, of sufficient length, a hammer, & a good work bench to do it on.........
I can & have field stripped both BHP's & 1911's over my jacket/shirt spread out over the ground & cleaned them of mud/snow or whatever. you cannot do that with the external extractor, which saves the factory probably $15.00 less to mill the slide for the external extractor & probably saves another $10.00 to make the external extractor, that is the only reason they were made .......or every 1911 would now be made with them, as it is only one company still makes an external extractor equipped 1911.
Bill L. at Cylinder & Slide didn't mouth it, though he did rebuild my sear for me at the 1986 Bianchi Cup when he'd found that it had worn........... he charged me $15.00 back then, small sized sheriff's dept. deputies didn't & don't make a lot of money........... & I was very thankful for his help too. Bill is truly a classy guy & a great gunsmith.
Bill Laughridge of C&S elaborates a bit about the flaw in the extractor and the damage caused by dropping the slide on a round in the chamber.
Many of the Hi-Power's flaws were cured over time by the industry, and particularly by FN/Browning. Until 1962, the GP had an internal extractor that was very small, and prone to breakage. Notes master Hi-Power custom gunsmith Bill Laughridge of the Cylinder & Slide Shop, "The fastest way to break one of the old extractors is to lock the slide back, drop a cartridge into the chamber, and then slam the slide on top of it. Always cycle the first round into the chamber out of the magazine!" In '62, however, the Browning was strengthened by a much more durable outside-mounted extractor.