Negative. Includes both factory 10rd mags and the full set of X-Ray night sights. And the box.
That goes for both P365s we have on consignment at the moment.
-Jeff
Check out the Zastava CZ99/CZ999 series. P226/8-inspired clones out of Serbia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zastava_CZ_99
I see CZ99s on the used market these days for $200-300 in perfectly good condition.
There's a new model coming around from Slovenia lately, too...
Excellent buy. Yours looks to be in much, much better condition than mine.
I have both, so my friend and I did a visual comparison for Reddit about a year ago. He did the writing, so there's a few slight omissions and simplifications (e.g. referring to the M9 by the name of its non-military...
Great thread. One small clarification to the above post, though: the firing pin block in the top of the slide was added to the 92S-1 (later 92SB) for U.S. Air Force trials in 1981.
Depends on your intended purpose for that ammo... unless you're implying that you don't even know the cartridge in which your new rifle is chambered...
Definitely Browning Hi-Power. It's got three viewports down the back, right? My factory BHP mag looks identical to this one, no markings.
EDIT: After some extra checking for process of elimination, I can rule out all the other suggestions that have been posed in this thread: it is most...
Long story short: the Eastern Bloc collapsed, as did the USSR, and almost everyone's switched to 9x19mm Parabellum by now.
EDIT: Also, the 9x18 never really caught on elsewhere.
Correct, although a word of caution: not all 7.62x39 ammo under the "Red Army Standard" brand is full-copper-jacketed. Most of it is still bimetal-jacketed, so you must read the label to be certain of what you're buying.
Anytime, glad I could help.
You want to know about the Russian commercial one from Baikal, or the Soviet Russian military model?
I don't personally know anyone with an example of the latter, but I'd bet a large sum that it's as reliable as they get.
As for the former, the post-Soviet...
Incorrect. My Bulgarian military Makarov is a 1989, and I got after last October. You're good to go.
EDIT: There seems to be some confusion in this thread regarding the "PM". "PM" stands for (transliterated from Russian) "pistolet Makarova", or "Pistol of [Nikolai Fyodorovich] Makarov"...
http://www.jgsales.com/7.62x39-red-army-standard-copper-jacket-123gr-fmj-ammo,-1080rd-case.-p-70144.html
Steel-cased, but copper-jacketed. No steel in or on these bullets, and it's only 31 cents a round. Worth a look, I'd say.