SIG: Schweizerische Industrie-Gesellschaft
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The SIG P210 pistol was originally created in 1947 by Schweizerische Industrie-Gesellschaft, also known by the acronym SIG. It was founded in 1853 as a train car manufacturing plant in Neuhausen am Rheinfall, Switzerland by Friedrich Peyer, Conrad Neher, and Heinrich Moser. SIG started making small arms in 1860. Three years later, master locksmith Johann Ulrich Hämmerli established his company in Lenzburg, Switzerland, to fulfill the Swiss army order for rifle barrel manufacture. Owing to the traditional Swiss passion for bullseye target shooting, Hämmerli distinguished himself as a world-class maker of target firearms for 50-meter pistol and 300-meter rifle competition. In 1921 Ulrich’s son Rudolf took over the family business. After Rudolf’s death in 1947, Hämmerli was sold and converted into a joint stock company. Meanwhile, SIG fulfilled numerous Swiss government and private orders for military small arms and their commercial counterparts. Its in-house designs for the delayed blowback Sturmgewehre 57 and gas-operated Sturmgewehre 90 were adopted as Swiss official issue rifles. Their commercial derivatives in the SIG 510 and 550 series are regarded as the finest weapons of their type ever made.

As
its firearms business expanded, SIG took over Hämmerli in 1973. Between 1973 and
1979, these Swiss gunmakers jointly developed various new target pistol models.
Their precision pistols included the
SIG Hämmerli P240, adapting the P210 to formal target shooting disciplines,
available in three user-interchangeable calibers, .38 S&W wadcutter, .32 S&W
Long, and .22 Long Rifle. They also featured a family of rimfire target
handguns, including semiautomatic rimfire handguns developed on the basis of the
Walter Olympia design, the
208, 211, 214, and 215 target pistols and their 212 hunting counterpart,
along with single shot
Free Pistol 150,
160, and
162. Their flagship model was the service-grade SIG P210, a locked-breech
single action semiautomatic pistol that refined the classic Browning pattern in
its successive embodiments in the U.S. M1911, Soviet TT-1930, Belgian GP35, and
French 1935 pistol designs.
In the early Seventies, SIG undertook the design and development of a pistol
that could be easily and cheaply mass produced with modern technology. In order
to save on the production costs, they entered into collaboration with the German
firm of
J.P. Sauer & Son. Before World War II, Sauer had been located in Suhl in
Thuringia. After the war it reorganized in the Western Occupation Zone in
Eckernfoerde in the state of Schleswig-Holstein near the Danish border.
Specializing in sporting rifles and shotguns, Sauer made no sidearms since the
end of World War II until the first of the SIG-Sauer pistols, the P220. The P220
was developed for the armed forces and adopted in 1975 as the standard issue
pistol of the Swiss army and the Japanese self defense forces. The P220 measures
up against the SIG P210 at 25 meters. It is not meant to do so at the longer
ranges, where the P210 excels. The P220 and its Sauer-made successors have been
deemed good enough for government work by numerous agencies around the world.
Their advent foretold the demise of SIG firearms.
In 1997, the firearms division of SIG was restructured and renamed SIG Arms
Hämmerli AG. It underwent downsizing in 2000, upon the expiration of government
contracts for the manufacture of the Swiss military issue assault rifle. As a
result of this reduction in demand, SIG transformed its firearm production
facilities into a distribution center. On November 30, 2000 the corporate parent
SIG divested itself of SIG Arms. Since then, SIG has rebranded itself as an
industrial holding company best known for its beverage packaging products.
Two German investors, Michael Lüke and Thomas Ortmeier, purchased the entire
arms section of SIG Neuhausen. This sale did not include the trademark thitherto
applied to the SIG firearms. In its wake, Hämmerli reacquired a measure of
corporate independence, reverting to their original name, Hämmerli AG. In July
of 2003 it relocated to Neuhausen am Rheinfall and merged with the arms
manufacture operated by Lüke and Ortmeier, then known as
SAN Swiss Arms AG. Both companies now have the same owners and managing
director, but claim to operate autonomously. Hämmerli continues to collaborate
with Sauer, e.g. by supplying its aluminum stock supporting the Sauer barreled
action of the 205 System.
SIGARMS,
Inc. began in 1985 in Tyson’s Corner, Virginia, as the U.S importer of SIG
and SIG-Sauer handguns, including the SIG P210, the civilian version of its
successor in the Swiss military service, the SIG-Sauer P220, and the pocket
pistol, the SIG-Sauer P230. Two years later, SIGARMS moved to Herndon, Virginia,
and introduced the SIG-Sauer P225 in 9mm, followed by the P226 and P228 in 9mm.
By 1990, SIGARMS began stateside manufacture of handgun components, moving to
its present location in Exeter, New Hampshire, and beginning the production of
the P229 in .40 S&W in 1992. In keeping with the foregoing, as of 2005, none of
the pistols it imports or manufactures bears the distinctive oval trademark of
SIG. Their connection with the original maker of SIG firearms, Schweizerische
Industrie-Gesellschaft, is by now merely historical.
Excellence in mechanical engineering often comes through the tedium of
refining an invention of a great pioneer. As proven by their divestment from
gunmaking, SIG never made a lasting commitment to the art. Their products
responded to the profit motive in the service of military procurement. But their
accomplishment endures in its excellence. We are fortunate to have their
bloodline continued by new owners, and hopeful for new developments of
distinction to emerge from their hands.
John Moses Browning

John
Moses Browning is credited with some of the most significant inventions in
small arms. Prominent among them is the tilting barrel short recoil breech lock
of the
M1911, arguably the best means of retarding the cycling of a
self-loading action of sidearms chambered for high pressure ammunition. The
P210 is built around the same action. It differs from the M1911 in details that
take its design to a logical conclusion.
Browning was born on January 23, 1855. He began his career as a gunmaker in
1879 by producing a breech loading single shot rifle of his own design in a
company started jointly with his brothers in their native Ogden, Utah shortly
after the death of their father. In 1883,
Winchester Repeating Arms Company purchased the rights for its production.
Browning’s subsequent collaborations with Winchester included the first
successful repeating shotgun, the lever action
Model 1887; the popular .22 caliber pump action rifle,
Model 1890; the exposed hammer pump action shotgun,
Model 1897, equally capable of harvesting game birds in the field and
sweeping up the battlefield in its fearsome guise as the
“trench broom”; the first repeater rifle to accommodate smokeless powder
cartridges fed from a tubular magazine, the lever action
Model 1894; and
Teddy Roosevelt’s “big medicine”, another lever action rifle equipped with a
box magazine designed for the powerful .405 Winchester Center Fire (WCF)
cartridge loaded with jacketed sharp-pointed spitzer bullets, the
Model 1895. These manually operated actions defined the benchmarks for lever
and pump operated long guns, much as the contemporaneous designs produced
between 1884 and 1898 in Germany by
Peter Paul Mauser continue to define the state of the art for the manual
turnbolt rifle action.
Whereas metallic centerfire cartridges had been
introduced in 1873 with the 44-40 Winchester, their original loadings were
ill suited for repeating firearms because of copious fouling produced by black
powder. This changed in 1886, when French chemical engineer
Paul Vieille invented
smokeless powder that was much safer, as well as faster- and
cleaner-burning. Responding to this innovation, Browning sought to perfect the
self-loading action in small arms. He developed relationships with Winchester’s
competitors such as
Colt Firearms and
Fabrique Nationale d’Armes de Guerre (FN) in Liege and Herstal, Belgium,
resulting in their production of low-powered semiautomatic pistols of his
design, chambered mainly in the modestly powered caliber .32 ACP, an
abbreviation standing for Automatic Colt Pistol, and operating on the
blowback principle. Browning’s collaboration with Colt gave rise to the
Model 1895 machine gun nicknamed the “potato digger” for the tendency of its
action lever to kick up ground dirt in operation and the remarkably successful
gas-operated
Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) of 1917, as well as a number of semiautomatic
pistols.
On April 20, 1897 Browning received a patent for a self-loading
short recoil-operated automatic pistol with a locked breech. Colt and
Browning used this patent as the basis for the 1900 series pistols, chambered in
the new caliber .38 ACP. Their design was characterized by incorporating the
breech block of the pistol into a slide that contained its barrel. The pistol’s
barrel was locked to the slide in battery, by means of ribs cut in the barrel
and fitting into the matching grooves cut into the slide. Two swinging toggle
links attached to the front and rear of the barrel and pinned to the frame
caused the barrel to drop free of the slide, as the barrel and the slide moved
rearwards under recoil. This initial motion disengaged the action lock, freeing
the breech to open for ejecting the spent casing of the fired round. The next
round would then be pushed upwards out of the detachable box magazine by the
spring acting on the magazine follower, to slip under the spring tensioned
extractor hook on its way to ride the loading ramp into the chamber of the
barrel, propelled by the combustion energy stored in the recoil spring. Given a
proper recoil spring weight, this cycle
replicated in a semi-automatic sidearm the
controlled feed principle embodied in the finest military turnbolt designs
of the day.
This complicated dropping barrel arrangement was greatly simplified in the
M1911 Colt semiautomatic pistol, initially chambered for the
.45 ACP round
developed in 1905 in a collaboration between Colt and Winchester. Browning
improved his brainchild by eliminating the front link, and locating the barrel’s
muzzle end in the front of the slide with a removable barrel bushing. Instead of
dropping in the self-loading cycle, the barrel would swing its breech end
downwards, pulled there by the remaining rear link.
The Colt .45 was purchased in large quantity by the Department of the Army.
As the Model 1911A1, it
was adopted as the standard-issue U.S. sidearm during both World War I and
World War II. In addition to delivering about 2.5 million of its .45 pistols to
the U.S. government, Colt was very successful in selling the same pistol
commercially. Its design was enormously influential, the original
Colt eventually inspiring copies or derivatives in the Soviet Union by
Tokarev; in Czechoslovakia by
Česká Zbrojovka (CZ); in Switzerland by SIG and
Sphinx Arms; in Austria by
Glock; in Italy by
Tanfoglio and
Pardini; in
Spain by
Astra Unceta,
Llama Gabilondo, and
Star Bonifacio Echeverria; in Germany by Sauer and
Walther; and in America by
Ruger and
Kimber, and
Smith & Wesson, along with hundreds of custom gunmakers. Even its simplified
configuration, however, left a lot to be desired. Since the M1911 slide requires
a removable bushing, its muzzle end barrel play can be readily controlled by
hand fitting this part to minimal tolerances. But the extra clearance between
the slide and the bushing adversely affects the consistency of barrel alignment
to the slide, the single most crucial factor in determining practical handgun
accuracy. These considerations motivated the development of the Colt Series 70
collet bushing design, which controlled the muzzle end of the barrel with
self-sprung fingers. Unfortunately, it was plagued with the attendant breakage
issues. Today, a similar effect might be achieved with
spherical barrel bushings pioneered by
Briley and popularized by
Smith and Wesson, or
flared bull barrels fitted directly to bushingless slides. This problem was
solved more definitively in the final pistol design to incorporate Browning’s
contribution, the
Hi-Power or Grand Puissance (GP), left unfinished at the time of Browning’s
death on 26 November, 1926, of heart failure in Liege, Belgium. The
GP35 was completed by the FN engineer Dieudonné Saive, later renowned for
work on the
FN FAL. Saive superseded the M1911 removable spare part with a bushing
permanently pinned into the slide. The GP35 also dispensed with the pivoting
barrel link used to pull down the barrel in the recoil stroke of the M1911 in
favor of a camlock ramp bearing against a steel lug staked into the frame. Most
Browning pattern pistol designs produced since then incorporated both of these
features.
As
recounted by Stephen P. Halbrook, in testifying before the U.S. Congress
against a 1935 handgun-registration bill, the pioneer of firearm forensics,
Calvin H. Goddard, epitomized his ideas of connections between guns and
crime with a succinct reference to the permissive tranquility of Switzerland:
“Any Swiss citizen may carry a pistol, his pockets may bulge with pistols,
without a permit, but if he kills somebody he is out of luck.” At the time,
these receptacles were likely to bulge with
antiquated hardware. The officially issued Model 1929 Revolver, chambering
the 7.5 Ordnance round ballistically similar to .32 ACP, had remained
essentially unchanged since 1884, whereas the Model 1906/29 Parabellum, the
direct descendant of the first semiautomatic pistol ever to be issued to a
military force in 1900, was handicapped by chambering
7.65x21.5mm Parabellum, the bottlenecked round originally inherited from the
Borchardt pistol by
Georg Luger. This cartridge had been long since rendered obsolete in
military service by its straight-walled counterpart, the
9x19mm Parabellum, by then well on the way to becoming the most popular
pistol round of all time. In a tribute to the passion for target shooting
complementing the neutrality of the Helvetic Federation, these arms combined
moderate ballistic power with superb accuracy. But the approach of global
warfare inspired a quest for a sidearm that delivered a stronger punch with
equal precision.
In a rare concession to martial fashion, the next Swiss sidearm was to
chamber the ubiquitous 9x19mm Parabellum instead of an indigenously developed
cartridge. While some experimental variations of the Pistole 06/29 were produced
in that chambering, the messy settings of trenches precluded reliance on the
intricate toggle mechanism of the Luger pistol. Thus SIG turned to the next
advance in refining the Browning tilting barrel action, made in 1934 by the
Swiss designer Charles Petter, and embodied in the French military Modèle 1935
pistol. As manufactured by the French company Société Alsacienne des
Constructions Mécaniques (SACM), this sidearm chambered the similarly anemic
7.65 Long cartridge, but manifested advanced features in every other respect.
Petter improved its construction by dispensing with a barrel bushing to machine
the slide in a single piece with a differentially bored front opening. He also
copied
the 1930 Soviet Tokarev innovation of containing the hammer and its lockwork
in a single assembly removable by hand for cleaning and maintenance.
SIG licensed the Petter design in 1937. It served as the basis for a new
service pistol that was to prove itself as the culmination of Browning’s tilting
barrel design. SIG dispensed with the swinging links that Petter had copied from
the Colt Government Model, and used their own method of locking, with a
kidney-shaped cutout in the lug under the chamber. SIG also adopted
spring-loaded extractors. This extraction system has proved itself to be far
more durable and reliable than
the finicky self-sprung M1911 design.
The M1911 action is designed to pick up rounds only from a loaded magazine,
controlling their travel throughout the operating cycle. While slamming the
slide home on an empty chamber does not stress the M1911 extractor, the most
common cause of its breakage originates from slamming the slide home to snap
over a round hand-loaded into the chamber. The amount of pressure that a M1911
extractor places on the rim of a cartridge casing is regulated only by its
curvature in the part that passes through the extractor channel in the slide.
Too much curvature causes excessive pressure, whereby the extractor prevents the
cartridge casing from chambering, resulting in a failure to feed. Not enough
curvature causes insufficient extractor tension, resulting in failures to
extract the spent casing fully or to eject it. As with its unit construction
hammer group, the pivoting spring-loaded extractor of the P210 followed
the Tokarev pattern by relegating the control of extractor tension to a
separate coil spring, resulting in a major improvement in reliability and
serviceability, and enabling the extractor to snap over a cartridge dropped into
the chamber, without undue stress.
Several intermediate SIG designs included 15 and 16 shot staggered column
magazine variations. Their grip frames were judged too bulky by the Swiss
testers. Eventually the 8 shot single column magazine layout was settled upon.
The final version was designated SP 47/8, indicating the year of design
completion and the magazine capacity. In most ways, it was a considerable
refinement of the Browning design, as it had been further developed by Saive and
Petter. Whereas the bushing fixing the barrel at the muzzle end and the link
controlling its travel through the recoil cycle enabled the M1911 to be tuned
for consistency of barrel lockup to the slide, by contrast, the integral slide
and barrel cam on the SP 47/8 achieved better consistency in forgoing the
flexibility by dispensing with these extra parts. Mechanical accuracy, as
measured by groups shot out of a machine rest, was greatly improved by the
inverted rail design of the SP 47/8 enabling more precise and durable slide to
frame alignment. Correlatively, practical accuracy was aided by making the
trigger action on the SP 47/8, as determined by the sear engagement within the
field replaceable unit construction hammer unit, far easier to tune and
maintain, and its two stage trigger pull lending itself to better control by the
shooter.
The SP 47/8 became the first, and to date has remained the only sidearm to
amalgamate the advantages of Luger precision with Browning practicality, even as
it avoids the respective drawbacks of high maintenance and mediocre accuracy. It
did so by combining tight manufacturing tolerances with narrow operating
clearances. Tolerance is the amount by which the actual size of the part varies
from its nominal size. This variation depends on the precision of the
manufacturing process. Tight tolerances are unequivocally advantageous in all
applications. Clearance is the dimensional difference in size between the
bearing surfaces of a moving part and the part that supports it. Positive
manufacturing tolerances define the maximum and minimum size for both parts, and
thereby the range of clearances. Some clearance is required to avoid binding the
moving part in operation through contamination by dirt or differential thermal
expansion. Whereas an M1911 requires some looseness to operate reliably in the
field, the SP 47/8 is in no way handicapped by its tight clearances. The Luger,
the Colt, and the SIG are equally capable of fulfilling their combat mission in
the hands of a skillful and conscientious operator. But the SIG stands alone in
its unique blend of features responding to the exigencies of military service
and civilian use.
Military Issues
The SP 47/8 is a single action locked breech self-loading pistol with a
detachable 8-round single stack magazine. As a Browning derivative, it is
acclaimed for making a design contribution in its inverted slide rail
arrangement. But this ostensibly novel arrangement duplicates the receiver to
frame interface of the previous Swiss service pistol, the Georg Luger-designed
Parabellum, equally known for its superlative accuracy. The M1911 slide
rails face outwards of the frame. The GP35 improves on this by having two sets
of rails, the inner and the outer. Given equal clearances, the end-to-end length
of slide rails is the most important factor in the alignment of the slide to the
frame. In the final version of the GP35, Saive nearly doubled the slide-to-frame
engagement of the M1911. The SP 47/8 design has nearly twice the rail engagement
of the GP35. Thanks to this feature, the Swiss pistol combines superior slide
alignment with sufficient working clearances.

Upon winning the Swiss military trials, the SP 47/8 pistol was adopted as
the Pistole 49 in military nomenclature, and designated as the SIG P210 for the
civilian market. All military pistols made by SIG were chambered in 9x19mm. The
military issue P49 was serially numbered with the A prefix. The Swiss military
production run of P49 pistols started with the serial number A100001 in
September of 1949. It ended in the early Seventies with the serial number
A213110. The decommissioned Swiss military pistols are usually stamped with a
letter P, designating private ownership.
One of the Swiss military specifications was that the service pistol had to
be equally usable unmodified for competitions at 50 meters as its predecessor,
the superbly accurate Swiss Parabellum 06/29, chambered in 7.65x21.5mm. The
target was a Swiss C50 at a distance of 50m (54.68 yards), with the 10 ring a
disk of 5 centimeters, just under 2" in diameter. SIG zeroes the P210 with Swiss
military issue ammunition with a point of impact placed 10cm above the point of
aim in order to allow a black six o’clock hold on the standard target. SIG
zeroes the pistols individually an in 99% of the cases installs a front sight
marked with the letter N. This sight has a post 5.9 mm tall. To be competitive,
the P210 had to produce groups under 5 centimeters with match quality
ammunition. Despite being handicapped by the tapered case 9x19mm Parabellum
ammunition, inherently less accurate than the bottlenecked 7.65x21mm Parabellum,
the P210 readily achieved its design brief. This is attested for every pistol by
an enclosed test target fired at that distance with standard ordnance ammunition
from a dated lot.
It bears notice that this performance is obtained from service grade
sidearms, whose reliability and ruggedness in virtue of refinement of design and
excellence of construction significantly exceed the qualities of a comparable
military issue M1911 pistol. By contrast, even after the latter pistol has been
accurized for bullseye competition by
the United States Army Marksmanship Unit, its
performance with caliber .45 Match hardball (full metal jacket) ammunition
or wadcutter is expected to yield at 50 yards an average extreme spread for
three consecutive groups of ten rounds each not exceeding 2.5 inches with no
group larger than 3 inches for wadcutter pistols and 3 inches average for hard
ball, with no hardball group exceeding 3.5 inches. When the M1911 pistol is set
up for service grade reliability, its average shot spread scores tend to double
in size.
While the mechanical accuracy of the P210 is due to its superior consistency
in aligning the bore axis of the barrel with the frame, its practical accuracy
is owed additionally to its excellent trigger action. Proper trigger control is
the essential first step in mastering a firearm, and the shooter who has
achieved deliberate consistency in releasing its sear will approach the best
results achievable from a mechanical rest, while shooting offhand. Mechanical
accuracy plays a fundamental part in improving bullseye scores, once the visual
and kinesthetic basics have been mastered. The excuse of not needing a gun that
shoots better than oneself is unacceptable in the light of reason. The
mechanical accuracy of a given firearm is characterized by the figure described
in the target plane by bullets thrown by it downrange, with its frame fixed in a
machine rest. Likewise, the shooter’s physiological capacity to hold and aim the
handgun in question is characterized by the figure described in the target plane
by his actual points of aim deviating from his intended point of aim. To the
extent that deviation from the point of aim is as likely in any direction as in
another, both of these figures approximate circles. It follows that the
mechanical looseness compounds the human error regardless of their ratio, as the
center of the circle defined by mechanical dispersion ranges inside the circle
defined by the shooter’s capacity to hold and aim.
The P210 has a
two stage trigger like the
m/96 Mauser and the
M1 Garand. It is characterized by two definite stages of travel, a
relatively lengthy takeup followed by a crisp release. Most of the P210
hammer/sear engagement is released during the trigger takeup, as evidenced by
the hammer retraction that takes place through the first stage of its trigger
pull. The M1911 has a single stage trigger comparable to a single action
revolver. In a single stage design the trigger is directly linked to the sear.
As soon as the shooter’s trigger finger takes up the slack, the trigger starts
moving the sear. Whereas in a two stage design the first stage completes the
rearward movement of the hammer, whereupon the second stage of the trigger pull
moves the sear to release the hammer. (The striker serves the same role in
hammerless designs.) Additionally, the P210 differs from the M1911 in having its
trigger pivot on a pin rather than slide in a channel. This method of operation
reduces lateral play and results in a smoother sear engagement.
The springs used in the P210 trigger action differ between the military
issue and the target model variations as regards the trigger spring (Abzugsfeder
— part #31 in the above diagram). They are identical as regards the trigger rod
spring (Abzugsstangenfeder — part #24). In a standard military issue
P210, the permissible first stage weight may range between 2000 and 2500 grams.
Replacing the trigger spring by a sport trigger spring (Sportsabzugsfeder)
would reduce the trigger pressure by about 500 grams. The trigger pull is
somewhat adjustable on the P210 via mainspring preload (parts #18 and #19), with
additional overtravel adjustment provided on the target models via a set screw
(part #42) accessible through the rear of the grip frame after the stocks have
been removed. Swiss pistol target shooting competitions require a trigger weight
above 1500 grams.
The Swiss Army pistol ammunition is the Pistolen Patrone 41, made by
RUAG. This 124gr. FMJ 9x19mm round comes in 24-round boxes, which suffice to
load three magazines. Like the RUAG rifle ammunition, it has replaced its
original nickel alloy bullet jacket with a jacket made of copper. Its headstamps
are the same as for the RUAG GP90 rifle round, comprising a T for the factory
location in Thun, placed above the last two digits of the year of manufacture.
The Pistolen Patrone 41 was originally produced for the P49. It is currently
issued for the P75. Available for purchase at pistol ranges throughout
Switzerland, unlike other RUAG ammunition, it is restricted from export. It is a
high-pressure combat round, accurate albeit not optimized for target shooting.
Nevertheless, the P210 remains a reference standard in Switzerland for use in
centerfire pistol competitions.
The post World War II era found the Danish military and police agencies
searching for a new sidearm to replace a hodgepodge of issue weapons ranging
from the venerable Bergmann-Bayard to the Husqvarna m/40, the Swedish-made
variant of the Finnish Lahti L35. To this end, SIG offered its SP 47/8 for
testing and evaluation in 1948. It delivered the first shipment of the ensuing
Danish contract m/49 later that year to the Danish Haerens Tekniske Korps (Army
Technical Corps). The subsequent shipments were designated for the Danish
Forsvarts Krigsmaterial Vorvalting (War Materials Administration). Each pistol
carried a special marking comprising a Danish crown over the agency initials HTK
or FKF. The first m/49 pistols featured walnut grips with horizontal grooves and
block sights zeroed for 30 meters, as distinct from the more typical 50 meter
zero found in other P210 variants. Later pistols utilized checkered grips of
black plastic. Further m/49 variants omitted the lanyard ring or included a
loaded chamber indicator. The least common variant, created for the Danish State
Police, used an aluminum frame. Danish m/49 pistols have their own serial
numbers ranging from 0001 to 16607 HTK, from 16608 to 25513 FKF, and from 3025
to 36441 HTK.
In 1995, nearly all of the pistols produced under the Danish contract were
repurchased by Hämmerli and classified as follows:
Category A — Used, original polished finish, very good condition;
Category B — Used, original matte finish, very good condition;
Category C — Used, factory reconditioned in matte finish;
Category D — Used, original fair condition.
Packaged in new gold-printed blue cardboard boxes featuring the m/49 designation
under a Danish Crown, the m/49 was released into civilian channels. Each box
bears a small white label on the side of its top, identifying the pistol’s
original arsenal grading, serial number, configuration, and chambering.
In 1998, DS Arms in Round Lake, IL, USA, began the importation of the m/49.
Previously, the m/49 was seldom encountered in the United States, mostly as
imported in small lots under the ATF Form 6. Some of the m/49 pistols have
arrived on the civilian market bearing the original finish, usually in anywhere
from 40-80% condition, while others were sold as arsenal refinished, usually
bearing a Category C designation. The arsenal refinishing took place in 1978,
whereupon these pistols were returned to Danish service, causing wear typical of
a service pistol, with small nicks and gouges, and finish thinned at the muzzle
and at high points, particularly along the front of the frame.
A small number of m/49 pistols was chambered for 9x21mm ammunition, most
likely so configured for sale in nations that forbid civilians to possess
firearms chambered for military calibers.
The slides, frames, barrels, and hammer action assemblies of all military
pistols bear matching serial numbers. Military magazines are seamless and
unnumbered. The mechanical condition of military pistols indicates very little
internal wear, with sharply rifled, corrosion-free barrels. Their mechanical
operation is smooth and strong. The triggers break crisply. The magazine and
manual safeties function reliably, as do the triggers and hammer action
assemblies. The recoil spring units are resilient, implying proper maintenance
habits.
The P210-4 was produced for the German Border Police (Bundesgrenzschutz) in
a configuration that incorporated a loaded chamber indicator as found on some
Swiss police issue commercial pistols, and typically lacked the standard lanyard
loop in its grip frame. The normal serial number range for these pistols was
from D 0001 to D 5000. Reportedly, the loaded chamber indicator was discontinued
as likely to interfere with the self-loading operation of the pistol.
Like all Swiss firearms, the P210 is designed and built to be cleaned and
lubricated by Automatenfett gun grease. The current, graphite-based formulation
was developed for the STGW57 battle rifle. Traditionalists will seek the old
yellow kind, also suitable for treating wooden gun stocks.
Commercial Variations
The commercial SP 47/8 and the P210 were made in both Parabellum chamberings
of 9x19mm and the 7.65x21mm. The SP 47/8 production run, originally bearing its
own serial numbers without a letter prefix, beginning with 6001, continued into
the Fifties, merging with the P210 civilian production numbered with the P
prefix. Starting in 1965, from serial number P 57001 onwards, the P210 frame was
strengthened to resist cracking reported by Swedish shooters. Coincidentally,
the Swedish shooting community enjoys access to hot Bofors M39B 9x19mm
ammunition, banned from import to the U.S. owing to its unmatched capacity for
penetrating body armor.
The commercial manufacture of the P210 was paused for several years,
starting in the late Seventies. Between 1983 and 1984, SIG introduced a new
production series of the P210 starting with the serial number P 300001. Shortly
thereafter, SIG modernized its production line by switching over to Computerized
Numerical Control (CNC) manufacture. A subsequent production modification
involved making major components out of billet father than old style forgings,
as illustrated in
the 2003 Swiss Arms catalogue.
According to the SIG Neuhausen engineers, the current production run of SIG
P210 involves very little hand fitting. Their tight clearances leading to
exceptional accuracy are due to the high tolerances of CNC manufacture and
superlative quality of raw materials. This is witnessed by the ready retrofit of
subcaliber conversion kits, along with smaller spare parts, onto the existing
P210 pistols regardless of their vintage.
The P210-1 variation has a glossy polished finish and fixed low-profile
sights. It is equipped with grips of chequered walnut. It bears the Swiss shield
atop a slide hump in front of the rear sight dovetail. It was sold commercially
and widely used by Swiss police units.
The P210-2 variation is the civilian counterpart to the military P49. It has
a dull black bead blasted finish and standard fixed sights. It is equipped with
black plastic grips with a chequered pattern molded in. It also bears the Swiss
shield.
The P210-3 variation has a glossy polished finish and standard fixed sights.
It is fitted with a loaded chamber indicator behind the slide ejection port. It
bears the Swiss shield. These pistols were primarily sold to Swiss police
agencies.
The P210-4 variation has a dull black bead blasted finish and standard fixed
sights. It is equipped with a loaded chamber indicator, and typically lacks the
standard lanyard loop in the grip frame. A special production run of 5,000
P210-4 was sold to the German Border Police (BGS) in the early Fifties, bearing
a serial number with the D prefix and German proof marks. A small commercial
production run of P210-4 in the same serial number range lacks the serial number
prefix and comes equipped with the lanyard loop.
The P210-5 variation was introduced in the late Fifties as the successor to
the long barreled target version of the SP 47/8, typically equipped with
adjustable sights. Its longer 150mm or 180mm barrel protrudes from the front
opening of the slide, with the front sight mounted on a collar attached to it
with threaded rings and fixed with a Woodruff key. The P210-5 usually has a
standard slide, with its front sight channel typically filled up by a special
blank plate. The P210-5 also has the target trigger, which includes an internal
screw adjustment for trigger overtravel. It is normally recognizable from the
outside by its parabolic front curve. Some examples are built on the thicker and
stronger heavy frame made for Hofmann und Reinhard in Zürich in the mid
Seventies, and so marked by a stamping on the right hand side of the frame. This
modification was meant to stabilize the pistol for offhand aiming. An additional
batch of heavy frame pistols bears serial number ranges indicating production in
the Nineties. The most recent SAN production is built entirely on the new
streamlined style heavy frame replacing the original faceted variation:

The P210-6 variation was introduced in the early Fifties as the successor to
the target version of the SP 47/8. It is equipped with the target trigger and a
standard 120mm barrel fitting flush with the front opening of the slide. It has
been made with the heavy frame and the standard frame wearing wood or plastic
grip plates, equipped with the standard military pattern sights or the high
profile front sight matched with the click-adjustable rear sight.
The P210-7 variation is a very rare .22l.r. rimfire, blowback-operated
version of the P210, produced in a series of 480 pistols in the P40XXX serial
number range. This chambering is more often encountered as a conversion kit
comprising a lower-profile slide, non-reciprocating barrel, light recoil spring,
and a .22 l.r. magazine of a complex folded and welded or pinned shape in at
least two different patterns, designed to hold 8 rimfire cartridges inside the
standard magazine well. It comes equipped with the standard military pattern
sights or the high profile front sight and click-adjustable rear sight. In the
latter configuration, it is equipped with a special hammer that has an
abbreviated cocking tang and is cut down on top of the striking surface to clear
the rear sight blade protruding beyond the edge of the rimfire slide.
The P210-8 was introduced in 2001. It differs substantially from the earlier
models in having a lateral button-operated magazine release, omitting the
magazine disconnect safety, and adding a wider safety lever and an extended
tang. It is built on a heavy frame.
Leon Crottet collaborated with the SIG factory in Neuhausen in the
development of the P210-8 and its successors.

In 2003, the P210-6 and P210-5 families were extended with P210-6S and
P210-5LS, which inherited the extended tang and the lateral magazine release of
the P210-8. The 2003 SIGARMS brochure depicted four SIG P210 models: the
old-style target pistols P210-6 and P210-5, the standard 120mm barrel and the
extended 150mm barrel, with heavy frames and bottom magazine releases, and the
new generation P210-6 Sport and P210-5 Sport, both with heavy frames, grooved
front straps, extended frame tangs, side mounted magazine catches, and ergonomic
magazine extensions. The 210-5 is claimed to have a target grade trigger action,
with the interim Sport variation boasting an adjustable trigger stop and an
extended slide that looks like a lumpier barrel clamp-on rather than the
integral piece of the latest P210-5LS. For the time being, the Swiss market
appears to offer both long barrel variations. The P210-LS has an extended slide
fitting flush with the end of its long 150mm barrel. In the European market,
this model is complemented by the P210-5S, having a standard length slide with a
contoured barrel weight affixed to the end of its 150mm barrel. The ongoing
availability of a 180mm barrel invites the aftermarket construction of the Wyatt
Earp commemorative variarion P210-9, combining the long slide of the P210-5LS
with the barrel-mounted front sight of the original P210-5.
The SP47/8 magazine is not interchangeable with the P210 magazine, for want
of the crimp on the upper left hand side of its body and the matching reluef cut
in the magazine follower, as found in the latter. There exist three kinds of
P210 magazines. Early magazine bodies, manufactured for SIG by Mec-Gar, are of
seamless construction, whereas more recent ones, manufactured by Sauer, are
folded in the back in a dovetail pattern. Lastly, the magazines retained by the
lateral button latch of the P210-8, P210-6S, and P210-5LS can be recognized by
the corresponding cutout in the magazine body. These magazines are also equipped
with ergonomically extended floorplates.
All P210 pistols come with a numbered test target indicating the number of
shots fired, the range, and the date of the ammunition lot. The factory box also
includes an instruction manual, and a plastic magazine loader. The SIG P210 is
unmatched by any of its Browning pattern predecessors in strength, ruggedness,
and durability. Its principal drawback is the cost of manufacture.
P210 Features and Accessories
Choosing a P210 is a matter of deciding between rugged simplicity and
sporting refinement. While the factory micrometer sight presents an excellent
sight picture, it is ill suited for holster carry. A standard issue pattern
pistol is better suited for defensive application than the target pistols, in
virtue of lacking the trigger stop screw, which might back out under recoil.
Shopping for an older pistol purchased second-hand is mostly a matter of
watching out for the evidence of wear and damage by botched gunsmithing. Each
pistol should be evaluated for the quality of its fit, the wear of its finish,
and the state of its preservation. Pistols bearing the original finish often
have frames faded to a straw color, while the slide remains faded blue. Such
discoloration is normal, attributable to the aging of oxidized blue finish on
steel that has been heat treated to different degrees. Every P210 should have a
tight slide to frame fit with negligible lateral play at any point in the recoil
cycle. Its barrel lockup should be tight in battery. The slide should retract
smoothly, with no discernible pause or hesitation. The trigger action should be
slick in both stages of the trigger pull, with a palpable transition point
between them. A positive reset in the first stage must take place upon releasing
the finger pressure short of pulling the trigger all the way through the sear
release. There should be no lash after the sear has been released. A proper
trigger disconnector activation takes place after about 1/8" of slide
retraction. Very little hammer movement may take place when pulling the trigger
while the safety is on. The principal signs of wear can be found in dings on the
breech face, the firing pin stop plate, and the recoil shoulder located inside
the frame dustcover. The wear of the finish from the frame rails and slide
tracks is usually proportional to the count of rounds fired through the pistol.
A common sign of ham-fisted abuse is an arc traced on the left hand side of the
frame by the latch tongue of the slide stop lever accidentally pivoted downwards
after missing its proper position during reassembly.
A significant flaw of the P210 design is that its safety locks only the
trigger, leaving the firing pin free to move around. By contrast, the
frame-mounted thumb safety lever on the M1911 and the GP35 blocks the sear.
Additionally, the grip safety on the former pistol blocks the trigger until
depressed. The Petter slide-mounted safety lever improves on these arrangements
by locking the firing pin upon engagement. Additionally, automatic firing pin
locks that disengage at the end of the rearward motion are incorporated in the
Series 80 M1911 design by Colt and recent Mk III variation of the GP35 by FN. In
this aspect, the P210 is inferior in security all of these pistols.
Unfortunately, the unit construction of its hammer action group discourages any
locking connection between the sear incorporated therein and the frame-mounted
safety lever. However, the P210 appears to leave room for an automatic
plunger-style firing pin locking device. Since 1939 many M1911 pistols have been
equipped with the
firing pin safety mechanism invented by William M. Swartz. It is currently
used in pistols made by Smith & Wesson and Kimber. The Swartz safety releases
the firing pin lock whenever the grip safety is depressed by a normal firing
grip. A relief cut on the right hand side behind the sear witness port of the
P210 hammer housing could accommodate the plunger for connecting to the existing
safety lever or a retrofitted grip safety device. In its present form, the P210
is liable to discharge accidentally if it falls from a sufficient height on a
sufficiently hard surface while a round is chambered, even if the safety is set.
In our litigious society, this amounts to a serious safety issue.
Other features of the P210 have inspired grumbling amidst its owners. The
short tang of the P210 exposes the web of the shooter’s hand to being pinched by
the hammer under the cycling of the slide. There are four ways to deal with
hammer bite, in an increasing order of manliness: (i) weld up,
glue, or
bolt on an aftermarket beavertail frame tang extension; (ii) stone down the
hammer tang about 1/8", as done by many Swiss target shooters; (iii) wear a
shooting glove or a Band-Aid; and (iv) treat it as a character building
opportunity. Real men look forward to love bites.
The P210 heel magazine catch is cumbersome in operation, though far less
prone to accidental release during carry than the side-mounted button of the
M1911 and GP35. Many competitive shooters find it an impediment to using the
P210 in timed events that require rapid reloads. But for defensive use, reliable
and consistent magazine positioning and retention is by far the most significant
parameter affecting semiauto pistol reliability. The heel latch system ensures
it better than the vast majority of alternative designs. A brief look at the
bearing surfaces suffices to show that the lateral release is inferior in this
regard. Something along the lines of Don Giovanni machismo might account
for a shooter being more concerned with dropping a magazine at will than keeping
it in place. Men secure in their mindset may find that their priorities differ.
But the manliest of them might find themselves stymied by the loop of the P210
magazine catch, liable to break off when the pistol is used for a buttstroke
against a rocky noggin, or fired braced off a hard rest.
The extended magazine floorplate, made and sold by
Karl Nill, affords the preferred solution to this predicament.
A double column magazine of the SP 47/16 prototypes might have been an
improvement not only on the account of the extra rounds, but in virtue of better
accommodating the tapered 9x19mm case. On the other hand, in its present form
the P210 makes an excellent concealed carry pistol for anyone concerned with
hitting whatever he is aiming at. Owing to its slim profile, its rounded
wraparound grip design, and the absence of sharp corners and edges on the butt,
it is one of the best packing service sidearms. The adjustable micrometer sight
is the only part likely to snag on clothing. The rounded corners on the factory
contrast sights eliminate this concern.
Good holsters are hard to come by. Famous makers have been known to screw
up. The author’s favorite rigs are made for him by
Josh Bulman. Bulman’s cowhide holsters are very reasonably priced. Shooters
who tend to be hard on leather would be well advised to pay extra to have them
made out of
shell cordovan. It is not a typical
leather in the conventional sense of tanned skin, found within the epidermis
and dermis. The cordovan shell is the vegetable tanned subcutaneous layer that
covers the equine posterior. In this writer’s vocational capacity alternating
between a gadfly and a horse’s arse, he counts it among his favorite substances.
Any reader who hates getting his leather scuffed or soaked through, or just
wants it to match his favorite pair of
Alden wingtips would be best advised to follow suit.
Barrels with rifling specially designed for lead bullets are available as a
drop-in option to fit any P210 irrespectively of its variation. The standard
barrel twist rate of the P210 too fast to stabilize lead bullets. Other
available accessories for the P210 include blank or serially numbered 150mm and
180mm barrels chambered in 9x19mm or 7.65x21mm Parabellum or .22 Long Rifle. The
latter chambering comes as part of the .22 Long Rifle conversion kit that
comprises a specially lowered lightweight slide, a light recoil spring, and one
or two magazines with corrugated bodies, designed to position 8 slim rimfire
rounds in the centerfire magazine well. A special short hammer assembly is
available for accommodating the use of a rimfire conversion kit with adjustable
sights.
There are several types of recoil springs fitted to the P210. All of them
are fitted onto a two-piece, full-length guide rod held together with a solid
transverse pin. The standard spring has a preload of 2.5kg and 4.8kg with the
slide drawn to the far rear position. This spring has no special markings.
Besides the standard spring there is also a special spring for use with the
drop-in barrel chambered for the 7.65x21.5mm Parabellum cartridge, marked
“7,65”. Another one goes with the .22 set, being so marked. A special strong
spring was furnished for Scandinavian and Finnish orders. It is marked “9,0 S”.
The preload of this spring is 3.4kg and 7.3kg with the slide drawn to the far
rear position.
Standard and contrast front sights are made in eight heights ranging in from
5.1mm to 6.5mm in 0.2mm increments, with matching standard and contrast rear
sights; click-adjustable rear sights and matching front sights exist in four
heights ranging in from 7.5mm to 9.0mm in 0.5mm increments. Different front
sight pushers are made for the standard pistol, the extended barrel, and the
rimfire conversion kit. Special cleaning kits exist for the centerfire and
rimfire calibers. Finally, French-fitted carrying cases accommodate solitary or
kitted pistols.
A serviceable P210 will outlast its owner. The next generation will thank
him for keeping his weapon original. Nevertheless, some P210 pistols can be seen
more or less tastefully customized by their owners. It is unlikely that their
collector value follows David Hume’s relativist precept by residing in the eye
of the beholder. In the long run, there is not a lot of random fluctuation in
the market for museum grade artefacts. Prices tend to rise and fall on objective
information regarding their tradition and provenance. Custom gunsmiths seldom
make the cut. The weapons that get collected rate on the integrity of their
manufacture. Mauser bolt actions are always collectable; Holland & Holland
M98-based bolt action hunting rifles may also qualify; but Griffin & Howe
M98-based bolt actions are unlikely to make the cut. Factory engraving adds to
collector value, whereas aftermarket engraving usually detracts from it.

Prior to the introduction of the P210-8, many of its predecessors had been
converted in the aftermarket to incorporate similar features by gunsmiths such
as the
Gunfactory in Switzerland,
Waffen-Oschatz in Germany, and
Wayne Novak in the U.S.A. The quality of custom craftsmanship
notwithstanding, its limited scope disqualifies it from rating as an enhancement
in P210 tradition or provenance. Additionally, the durability of aftermarket
magazine notches is likely to be an issue, as witness the story of Colt M1911
two-tone magazine bodies. Colt used to harden the tops of their M1911 magazine
bodies to ensure the durability of their latch slots, whence came
the two-tone magazines. Later on, the metal composition and heat treatment
was changed to eliminate the need for this visual feature. But the lesson
remains, that lateral magazine release may or may not require magazine bodies
different from those suited to a heel catch. Finally, the current fashion for
an aerodynamic rear sight profile disables a valuable capacity included in
the manual of arms of a Browning-type autopistol, a provision for racking its
slide one-handed, e.g. by hooking its rear sight on the belt.
In addition to beavertail and magazine floorplates,
Karl Nill makes a range of excellent service- and target-style grips for the
P210. The iron rear sight of the P210 can be replaced with a base for a
Docter red dot sight by
Evolution Gun Works. For shooters who wish to retain iron sights, there
exists
a quick detachable scope mount for the P210, made by RoCo.
SIG-Sauer




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