.357magger
Member
Nice thread from the other side of The Pond.
Thanks for sharing your collection.
Stay warm.
Thanks for sharing your collection.
Stay warm.

I'm surprised you don't have a Swedish lathi m40 in 9 mm luger or a Swede 6,5 mm Mauser. The Finnish mosins, the Swiss k31, the Swede Mauser are suppose to be tops in the surplus market. I don't know how much is available there gun wise. I picked up a Swede Husqvarna m40/9 mm and it's heavy.
For the ones who never seen or heard of the Swedish m40,
The Husqvarna M 40 Pistol – Forgotten Weapons
The last day at the range before it closed for the winter
Hämmerli 215
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S&W 19-3
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With vintage ammo
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Sig P210-2
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Sig P220
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Waffenfabrik Bern Parabellum 06/29
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3 generations of Swiss ordnance pistols
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I can see the Parabellum rocks.It's still one of favorites.
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But in the meantime, I missed a very nice 1917 DWM Luger for $ 1400 (sold hours after it was advertised), still kicking myself (until i get a chance to kick the LGS).
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I did some "Swiss" shooting myself yesterday. I went to the range to test and sight some guns in and the last one I shot was a Sphinx AS2000. The first shot at 10 yards went high and I adjusted the rear sights until I was on target. The results encouraged me to bring the target out to 15 yards and despite the 115gr Geco red box ammo, the five shot offhand group was pretty good.
It makes me wonder why the OP does not have one of those very well made early Swiss Sphinx pistols. The trigger is as excellent as in my P210-6 and I honestly had not thought that possible with the CZ75 platform.
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No, none of that is true, though conscription means that the majority of males get military training and service, with the opportunity to buy their service weapon at the end of service.Nice toys to play with. Is it true there it's the law that every Swiss citizen is a trained marksman and owns a gun in every household? They can all shoot accurately.
Nice toys to play with. Is it true there it's the law that every Swiss citizen is a trained marksman and owns a gun in every household? They can all shoot accurately.
No, none of that is true, though conscription means that the majority of males get military training and service, with the opportunity to buy their service weapon at the end of service.
What I found when living there, is that the Swiss believe in expertise at what they do, and extensive training, so I'd bet that good shooting skills are common in the sport's participants there.