Pancho_Villa
02-16-2015, 03:03 AM
Well, thought about posting it on the Thompson section, but it is a 1911 made by Thompson.(before Kahr) Standard G.I. except for the slide serration being angled. Trigger is nice too. One of the better ones they made. I have seen some bad ones and had one officer's ACP size gun that was pretty pad. Grip safety didn't work and the slide locked oen on every shot. Quite a few tool marks on it too. Didn't keep that one. The one I have has not failed. I don't shoot it much now. Still like new. Reallynever shot it much. Usually shot beaters I had. Real tight shooter.
http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/thumb2_0091-57.jpg (http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/0091-57.jpg)
And a sorta 1911ish, Argentine Ballester Molina .45. It was madeduring the time of WWII mostly for the local military. This one is so marked. And for the British for the war effort. The Colt 1911 was also made there under license. This is a simplified bersion. The top half is like the 1911 and the bottom half more like the STAR pistols from Spain. IIRC the barrel, link, recoil spring, magazine, and a few small parts interchange with the 1911. No grip safety.
Tje scuttlle butt on these pistolas is that they were made from the melted down steel from the Nazi pocket battleship, Graf Spee. It was badly damaged and scuttled at the mouth of the Platte River in Argentina duing WWII. Some historians hold to this story, others discount it. The steel used in these guns was most likely U.S. steel bought by the British and shipped to Argentina to make the guns. They are exremely well made, erviceable and accurate. This is an all original match #s gun. I have had one other that was a rework. It was a great shooter too.
http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/thumb2_18-215.jpg (http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/18-215.jpg)
http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/thumb2_0091-57.jpg (http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/0091-57.jpg)
And a sorta 1911ish, Argentine Ballester Molina .45. It was madeduring the time of WWII mostly for the local military. This one is so marked. And for the British for the war effort. The Colt 1911 was also made there under license. This is a simplified bersion. The top half is like the 1911 and the bottom half more like the STAR pistols from Spain. IIRC the barrel, link, recoil spring, magazine, and a few small parts interchange with the 1911. No grip safety.
Tje scuttlle butt on these pistolas is that they were made from the melted down steel from the Nazi pocket battleship, Graf Spee. It was badly damaged and scuttled at the mouth of the Platte River in Argentina duing WWII. Some historians hold to this story, others discount it. The steel used in these guns was most likely U.S. steel bought by the British and shipped to Argentina to make the guns. They are exremely well made, erviceable and accurate. This is an all original match #s gun. I have had one other that was a rework. It was a great shooter too.
http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/thumb2_18-215.jpg (http://www.bersaforum.com/images/1/1/8/18-215.jpg)