I read that middle mark as a &.
Also that. I looked closer, and it does appear to be an ampersand. Which makes even more sense. But the Astras marked that way are 25acp for sure.I read that middle mark as a &.
It clearly is. I thought it was an 'a' also, until I zoomed in and saw the difference in the typeface between that character and the other actual letter 'a's.I read that middle mark as a &.
Well now that that seems to be out of the way, did OP buy it?Also that. I looked closer, and it does appear to be an ampersand. Which makes even more sense. But the Astras marked that way are 25acp for sure.
The mag probably would tell you doubt there would be 1cm of of front to back slop in the mag to be ambiguousIt is a 6.35 Browning also known as 25acp.
The "a" means "at" in Spanish. It is how the Spanish dual marked pistols. Just like some are marked 7.65 a 32 for 7.65 browning and 32acp.
An easy way to check, pop off the slide, grab calipers and measure the distance from the throat to the rim. If it is roughly 16mm, you know for sure its a 25acp/6.35mm Browning.
Well, does is shoot 6.35/25 ACP or some mystery wildcat?
Better Pics hereWell, does is shoot 6.35/25 ACP or some mystery wildcat?
LOL and Peace to everyone
Better Pics here
"BUFALO" 6.35mm (.25 ACP)
Picked up a "BUFALO" at the Gettysburg Gun Show this weekend. It's a .25 ACP, Spanish, heavily influenced by Browning, pistol. These were made between 1919 and 1925, but this gun looks like it came off the assy line last week. Photo's for your enjoyment.www.mdshooters.com
Interesting stamps. How does it shoot?Better Pics here
"BUFALO" 6.35mm (.25 ACP)
Picked up a "BUFALO" at the Gettysburg Gun Show this weekend. It's a .25 ACP, Spanish, heavily influenced by Browning, pistol. These were made between 1919 and 1925, but this gun looks like it came off the assy line last week. Photo's for your enjoyment.www.mdshooters.com
Well, it is very reliable. I shoot Fiocchi FMJ ammo and have difficulty hitting a 12 inch circle at 25 ft. I'd say I shoot 5 out of 7 in a 14" group. I don't shoot it very often due to the fact that these guns were made with cheap (pot) metals.How does it shoot?
Inherited it.Well now that that seems to be out of the way, did OP buy it?
I really do not care for 38+P in my S&W 360 J airframe either. After about 25 rounds or so my palm felt like someone smacked it repeatedly with a ruler; hard. IDK how some get by with the 357 in the 360 PD. I'll have to try the +P in my 36 or Colt steel frames as I see no point in abusing myself with +P on the airframe.Since we brought up Mousegun accuracy :
1st Gen Raven w/ 20lb plus trigger , miss the paper entirely @ 7yds ( bullseye target , not silhouette )
Bauer ( SS clone of Baby Browning) keep in chest of B-27 @ 25yds . Limiting factor being tiny gun in my XXL hands .
Friend's 1948 production Astra Hammerless .25 , plink soda cans @ 10yds .
NAA .32 , I can't render an opinion , because of severe mismatch of extra tiny gun in my XXL hands . But with unorthodox grip that works best * for me * , certainly 2 minute of felon @ 3 arm lengths . Be interesting to have a decent shooter with hands the size of 8yo girl test it for me .
For Context :
Pre AMT Backup .380 ( single action ) , keep shots in head of B-27 @ 25yds . Great trigger , usable sights , but very painful to shoot .
13oz J Frame Airweight .38spl , capable of 90% scores on Qual COF intended for full size duty guns . Not as harsh as the AMT .380 , but 50rds of 158 left hand sore next day . I'm a recoil junkie , but 158 +P from 13oz is all the fun I am willing to engage in . Current all steel 16oz J is prefered .
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Mousegun Lesson Learned :
* When Carried in manner for quick access * , an Airweight J Frame can be carried and concealed as easily as a .25acp .
LOL!Tripple posted , and then I erased the actual Post by mistake