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#p210 carry
gun-gallery · 2 years
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Sig Sauer P210 Carry - 9x19mm
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tactical-weapons · 1 year
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SIG Sauer GmbH & Co.KG - P210 Carry Custom Works
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alanwalkergreen · 2 months
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Discover the Ultimate Portable Power Solution: AFERIY Reviews
🌟 Are you looking for a reliable and efficient portable power station? Look no further! 🌟
We've got you covered with our latest comprehensive review of AFERIY power stations. Whether you're an outdoor enthusiast, a camper, or just need a dependable power source for emergencies, this article covers everything you need to know.
🔋 AFERIY P310 3600W - Perfect for heavy-duty power needs. This powerhouse can handle large appliances and extended usage, making it ideal for serious campers and those who experience frequent power outages. With its impressive power output and capacity, you’ll never have to worry about being left in the dark.
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🔋 AFERIY P210 2400W - Great for balancing power and portability. The P210 offers a fantastic mix of high capacity and manageable weight, making it a versatile choice for a variety of applications. Whether you're working remotely, on a road trip, or preparing for unexpected outages, the P210 has got you covered.
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🔋 AFERIY P010 800W - Ideal for lightweight, on-the-go power. The P010 is perfect for those who need a compact and portable power solution. It’s great for short camping trips, powering small devices, and ensuring you stay connected even when you’re far from the grid.
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In our detailed review, we delve into the specifics of each model, providing you with essential insights into:
Power Capacity and Output
Understand how much power each station can provide and what kind of devices it can support. From small gadgets to larger appliances, we break down what each model can handle.
Battery Life and Recharge Times
Find out how long you can expect the power stations to last on a single charge and how quickly they can be recharged. This is crucial information for planning your trips and ensuring you have a reliable power source.
Portability and Ease of Transport
Learn about the weight, size, and design features that make each model easy to carry and use. Whether you need something light and compact or a more robust solution, we’ve got you covered.
Safety Features
Safety is paramount when dealing with portable power. Discover the built-in safety mechanisms like overload protection and temperature control that keep you and your devices safe.
But that’s not all! Our review also includes:
User Reviews and Testimonials: Hear from real users who have tested and relied on AFERIY power stations in various scenarios. Their experiences can help guide your decision and give you confidence in your choice.
Ready to find the best portable power station for your needs? Dive into our full review and make an informed decision that will keep you powered up, no matter where you are: AFERIY Reviews
🌍 Embrace the freedom of portable power with AFERIY. Whether you’re tackling the great outdoors, working remotely, or preparing for emergencies, our in-depth review will help you find the perfect power station to suit your lifestyle.
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gunbrokerblogs · 2 years
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Holiday Gift Guide: 5 Interesting and First-Rate Concealed Carry Handguns
Not that anyone necessarily needs an excuse to find a gun enthusiast in their life a shiny (or matte) new firearm, but the holidays are looming. There is a terrific variety of first-rate concealed carry handgun options these days. However, they’re not all as interesting as they could be. This holiday season, what if you looked around for the most interesting concealed carry for your favorite fan of firearms? Remember that small, concealable pistols are by no means a recent innovation. Be sure to browse both new and used guns for sale to find some gems.
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Hellcat RDP The Springfield Armory Hellcat RDP semi-automatic micro-compact is an exciting and excellent little pistol. For one, it looks like a SOCOM operator left his teched-out sidearm in the dryer too long, and it shrunk. It comes stock with red dot optics and a compensator. Despite its diminutive size, the Hellcat RDP is also a 9mm double-stack, featuring a capacity of 11+1 or 13+1 with an extended mag. Remington 51 The Remington 51, designed by legendary gunmaker John Pederson, is so ergonomic that it was initially billed as “self-aiming.” This concealable winner, chambered in 380 ACP, is one of the most comfortable pistols you will ever shoot. The release of the R51, Remington’s reimagining of the original, was initially plagued by technical glitches, though the 2nd generation models sorted those out. Because of its bumpy beginning, the R51 is now an often underpriced, high-quality 9mm pistol. FN 1910/1922 Anything with FN’s name on it, you know you can trust. The FN 1910 model is a concealed carry legend that set the stage for decades to come. One of them was even used to start WWI. The FN 1922 model is an FN 1910 with extended barrel bushing for greater accuracy and more mag capacity. Either of these often century-old or more pistols is a stellar concealed carry choice. Bersa 380 The Bersa 380 immediately gained attention for a variety of features. For one, it was highly reminiscent of the vaunted Walther PPK but could generally be found for half of what James Bond would pay for his pistol of choice. Then there’s the fact that it proved accurate, dependable, and genuinely lightweight. Despite its lightness, its design somehow manages to mitigate felt recoil. SACM 1935 The French military SACM 1935 is one of the most underrated pistols ever. For one, it rivals the Remington 51 for gorgeous ergonomics and the silkiest possible action. Then there’s the fact that this gun was the inspiration and blueprint for the masterpiece, the SIG P210—arguably the finest military pistol ever made. The only reasonable explanation for its relative obscurity is its chambering in the obsolete 765 French Long. However, there are modern manufacturers of the round, making the SACM 1935 a stellar concealed carry option. Plus, it’s one you can pick up for approximately a third or less of what you’d pay for a SIG P210. About GunBroker.com GunBroker.com is the ultimate online firearms marketplace for true gun enthusiasts. As one of the world’s largest marketplaces for buying, selling, and auctioning guns, users list almost anything gun-related and a lot more. Search the GunBroker.com listings for thousands of firearms every day. You’ll likely find anything from antique flintlocks to the most advanced competition-level handguns. Browse gun parts, ammunition, and firearm accessories. Plus, GunBroker.com is always safe and easy to use. So, it’s no surprise that this site is widely considered the most well-respected and trustworthy firearms marketplace online. Whether you’re looking for a Ruger Mini 30, a Hellcat RDP, 50 Beowulf ammo, or something else, start your search at GunBroker.com. Find the best concealed carry handguns available at https://www.gunbroker.com/ Original Source: https://bit.ly/3FztU9D
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yu-gi-oh-slavia · 2 years
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would absolutely kill to daily carry a sig p210
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ancaporado · 4 years
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Before the P320 SIG had a strong history of making modular handgun components. The p210 had a removable trigger package that could be taken out without tools. The P22X series elaborated on this by allowing for swappable slides that would convert caliber as easily as field stripping the gun. I by no means have a complete collection but for my P229 I have a complete "x-change" kit for 9mm, .40S&W, and .22lr. During ammogedon 2020, shortages in 9mm and .22 have found me using my .40 kit more often.
Magazines step from 12, 13, 15, 17, and 21 rounds of capacity in 9mm. 10, 12, 13, 15 for. 40/.357. Sadly, only 10 round magazines are available for .22lr. Long for size magazines can be fitted with grip sleeves to elongate the grip. Shorter magazines cannot be used in taller frames.
I still lack a red dot mounted slide, threaded barrel, or .357 SIG barrel(which drops in and uses the .40 slide and magazines) which would complete my P229 collection imo.
Unfortunately, the frames of the pistols are not modular so none of my p229 components are compatible with my p224. I cannot significantly change the length of the barrel, slide length, sight radius, or grip length of either pistol. When I crave a short slide with high capacity I use the P224 with a magazine extension. When I desire a flashlight I have to use the p229 etc...
SIG made major gains in modularity with the P250 series, a hammer fired, polymer framed, modular system which allowed for complete swapping of components. This was then applied to a much smoother, lighter triggered, striker fired P320.
The modularity of the P320 does come at a cost though. To accomodate the removable slide rails and trigger package, the system requires a wider footprint (harder to conceal), heavier (less comfy to carry), and higher bore axis (more felt recoil) than the Glock counter parts like the 17, 19, and 26.
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azws · 5 years
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#Repost @smooth_trigger_jim_reloaded 👈 Follow this #badass! 👊🔫 • • • • • How could I NOT snap a pic of @vikingtactics shooting the new P210 Carry? 🤩😎 #siglife #sigsauer #p210 #p210carry #9mm #pistol #singlestack #targetpistol #2a #azws #dontcallhimagunbunny #TwitterBound https://www.instagram.com/p/B7w3ARSBKRN/ https://www.instagram.com/p/B7w3ARSBKRN/?igshid=ic1qf43h5ogg
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tactical-weapons · 3 years
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SIG Sauer GmbH & Co.KG -  P210 Carry
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schweizerqualitaet · 6 years
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Apparently Danish Armed Forces had selected the Sig Sauer P320 X-Carry to replace their aging SIG P210 and once again, the P320 managed to outglock the Glock.
@samilarper
http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2018/04/16/danish-armed-forces-selects-sig-p320-x-carry/
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tutorbest · 3 years
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Sig Sauer P367
Sig Sauer P367 High-Capacity Micro-Compact is a polymer outline striker-shot self-loader gun fabricated by SIG Sauer expected for regular carry.[1] It is loaded in 9×19mm Parabellum and is appraised for +P (higher pressing factor) ammo while using offset super load magazines.[2] It is offered with Tritium XRAY3 Day/Night Sights and two 10-round magazines; one flush fit and the other with an all-inclusive finger tab. The P365, which supplanted the P290RS, is delivered in Newington, New Hampshire. In both 2018 and 2019, it was the top of the line handgun in the United States.The P365 is a striker shot, short-draw back handgun with a tempered steel slide, treated with a dark Nitron finish, and a polymer outline. The slide has serrations on both front and back for simple slide control. The polymer grasp acknowledges a super load 10-cycle, 12-round, or 15-round magazine. The magazine is delivered by a three-sided button on the grasp situated at the undercut trigger watchman segment. Per SIG Sauer, the P365 has the most minimal bore-hub proportion of any handgun at present made.[4]
 Sights are green tritium three-speck night locates that are made of steel and are equipped for being utilized to cycle the slide on account of one gave use being essential. Pointing is by battle sighting.[a] An exclusive rail is situated underneath the barrel.  Both red and green lasers and a light will be offered as extra things for this restrictive rail.[6] Adapters to change over the respectability rail to a standard rail for use with standard rail embellishments are likewise accessible.
 Dismantling requires no instruments and doesn't need that the trigger be pulled.For Massachusetts Attorney General consistence necessities, a model with a manual security and stacked chamber marker is accessible. In May 2019, the P365-MS, a model with a manual wellbeing, was made for the most part available.
 Examinations
 The grasp encases a treated steel discharge control unit (FCU) like that in the SIG Sauer P320.Due to drop-safe issues with the P320 in 2017, the P365 was drop tried more than 500 times utilizing an improved testing convention which dropped the gun at various points from shifting statures to guarantee that no such issue would occur.
 The striker terminating framework is almost indistinguishable from that in the P320. The short force locking framework is the SIG Sauer System made by SIG Sauer in 1975 for a Swiss Army contract by the then-existing Swiss Industrial Group (Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft, SIG). The SIG Sauer System enhanced the Petter-Browning framework utilized in the French Modèle 1935A, which SIG had authorized from SACM in 1937 and utilized in the SIG P210 handgun configuration, however isn't a similar framework, having been impressively improved upon.
 Contrasted with the SIG Sauer P290, the P365 is somewhat bigger and has a lighter striker trigger draw of 5.5 to 6.5 lbf (24 to 29 N) versus the P290 at 9 lbf (40 N). The P290RS has a restrike ability, yet in addition has a long twofold activity just trigger force. The takedown framework is like that of the P320, in that a switch is turned down with the slide locked back to deliver the slide from the casing.
 A P365 with its discretionary 15 round magazine is 0.46" taller than a Glock 19 with its standard 15 round magazine.
3. What sort of ammunition would i be able to shoot from my SIG SAUER gun
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breakingnewsalert1 · 5 years
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The Aristocrat’s Parabellum: Heckler & Koch P7 PSP
With its low-profile slide, innovative “squeeze-cocker” design, and reliable construction, the HK P7 PSP was a serious handgun for its era. (Photos: Richard Taylor/Guns.com)
SEE AT GUNS.COM FROM $1,900
Developed in the 1970s, Heckler & Koch’s P7 was billed as “the best combat pistol” on the market at the time and today is a solid collectible handgun.
Designed by Helmut Weldle — the same forward-thinking mind that helped craft the world’s first polymer pistol, the VP70, for HK — the semi-auto 9mm used a “squeeze-cocker” on the front of the grip, a concept he had recycled from an earlier handgun design that didn’t reach the market. This device cocked the internal striker of the pistol and gave it an exceptionally light single-action trigger.
The cocking lever is engaged with the natural movement of a shooter’s grip, providing a single-action trigger pull with each shot, and re-engages when released. (Photo: Richard Taylor/Guns.com)
As it was designed for West German police use, it was dubbed the Polizei Selbstlade Pistole, or Police Self-loading Pistol, due to that feature. Falling in line with German police acceptance testing, it earned the P7 designation as it was introduced after the Walther P-1 (P38), P2 (SIG P210-4), P3 (Astra 600), P4 (P-38 IV), Walther P5, and P-6 (SIG P225).
With a fixed cold hammer-forged barrel and polygonal rifling, the all-steel P7 was accurate while the 110-degree grip angle was billed as being very natural. Reliable, the P7 was designed so that an empty case would extract and eject even if the extractor was missing from the handgun. Using a hybrid gas-delayed blowback, recoil was light.
(Photo: Richard Taylor/Guns.com)
The thing is, cops in every country have a budget, even German ones, and the P7, while super neat, was kind of pricey when compared to the competition, a factor that meant it was only bought in small numbers. However, several German counter-terrorist teams (with larger budgets) adopted the HK PSP as did the German Army Special forces (KSK Kommando Spezialkräfte).
Speaking of pricey, when the guns were marketed in the U.S. with a corresponding American-style push-button magazine release rather than the European heel catch, they were marketed as “the most expensive handgun in the world,” with a list of the reasons why the P7 was superior to the more economical options. In the end, the HK squeezebox was only adopted by a few state police agencies, namely New Jersey and Utah.
One model, the P7A13, was even submitted to the U.S. Army’s XM9 9mm pistol trials in the 1980s to replace the M1911. While Beretta’s 92 series got the nod from the Pentagon in that case, HK did take advantage of those R&D Deutschmarks spent in the chase to field new variants of the P7 for the commercial market.
(Photo: Richard Taylor/Guns.com)
The P7, in turn, carved out a niche in with consumers as a handgun that would be chosen by the discerning gentleman, after all, HK at the same time was selling wood-stocked sporting rifles such as the HK 770. For instance, the fictional and independently wealthy detective Lucas Davenport, featured in John Sandford’s Prey series novels, carried a P7M13, the version of the pistol with a 13-round magazine, while fictional German terrorist-turned-crook Hans Gruber in Die Hard sported the same model but in a chrome finish.
This HK P7 PSP with a five-digit serial number is “PW Arms Redmond, WA” import marked and was produced in West Germany in the early 1990s. Currently in the Guns.com Vault, it is looking for a forever home.
This HK P7M8 is a Sterling, Virginia-marked import produced in West Germany in the mid-1990s. Note the difference in the trigger guard which now has a heat shield, the improved rear sight, and grip from the P7 above. The gun also has an ambi magazine release just below the guard and a lanyard loop in place of the original PSP’s heel-mounted release.
Ultimately, the P7 series was retired by HK over a decade ago but you can be sure that the legacy of these patrician pistols will endure as long as Die Hard is considered a Christmas movie.
SEE AT GUNS.COM FROM $1,900
The post The Aristocrat’s Parabellum: Heckler & Koch P7 PSP appeared first on Guns.com.
from Guns.com https://ift.tt/2yLI1VP from Blogger https://ift.tt/2KzD9IV
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weaponland · 5 years
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Пистолет Sig Sauer P210 Carry
Ещё одной новинкой от Sig Sauer Inc. на оружейной выставке SHOT Show 2020 стала "практичная/повседневная" версия Carry самозарядного пистолета P210, который компания недавно "оживила" в модели P210 Standart для целевой стрельбы. В компоновке новин... Читать дальше »
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jacewilliams1 · 6 years
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Learning from the master
The letter from Richard L. Collins, on engraved FLYING Magazine letterhead, was terse: “Why don’t you call me and we will set up a time to interview.” That was it. But for a recently-graduated English major living in New York City in 1982, that was enough. I first met Dick in the Park Avenue offices of FLYING Magazine, but I got to know Dick – and learned to fly – in Dick’s real office, the cockpit of 40RC, his Cessna P210. During my years at FLYING as a staffer and then as a freelance columnist, I made about 110 flights in over 500 hours in 40RC. They all began with my taking the train from Manhattan to West Windsor, New Jersey. Because Dick and Ann got up early and retired early, I received permission to dip into the special bookshelf at Dick’s home that held every issue of the original Air Facts. I spent hours reading articles by Dick and his father Leighton not to mention others, like Wolfgang Langewiesche who were, or became, historic figures.
Flying with Collins meant flying 40RC – in all kinds of weather.
Our flights from Trenton began early, and we brought lunch, prepared by Ann, which consisted of baloney on white bread, Fritos, and Coke, or later Diet Coke, served from a Stanley thermos. It seemed as though all of the controllers knew 40RC, and it was not at all unusual to receive our initial altimeter setting followed by “Hey Richard.” According to my logbook, we flew cross-country twice and made countless flights from Trenton to Wichita or Kerrville or Vero Beach (I still have a Mojave model given to the press by Piper at the original Malibu/Mojave rollout). Then there were the one-off flights, like the time we took 40RC to Edmonton for a story on commercial flights near the North Pole, or the trip to Oklahoma City to see the Gulfstream single-engine jet prototype called the “Hustler.” And of course, there was the annual flight to Green Bay for the Oshkosh airshow.
Flying left seat with Dick Collins was an experience that some dreaded, but which I came to love. Prior to planting myself in the left seat of 40RC, I had flown nothing more complex than a Cessna 172, and was in the midst of a multi-year effort to obtain my instrument rating. I was a rank beginner and a very marginal pilot, but I had the extraordinary good fortune to have been paired with perhaps the best flight instructor of all time. He was not just my flight instructor, he was the world’s flight instructor, and though I did not realize it at the time, my job was not just to write stories for FLYING, but to provide clinical data for Dick on how marginal neophyte pilots come to mischief. I did at least one of my jobs well, and we carried the formula through two books presenting a Socratic dialogue between student and master.
The cockpit of 40RC was a place where the pilot flew, not the autopilot. I know that the airplane was equipped with a basic wing leveler, but I did not know how to turn it on, and that was fine, since I would never have dared. While I would not trade the Garmin autopilot in my Cirrus today, neither would I trade a moment of those hours droning along in 40RC – striving for perfection – only to hear the drawl beside me: “Patrick, don’t chase that needle, the VOR is 150 miles away.” Or, when about to dip more than 90 feet above or below our assigned altitude, “Patrick, you may want to retrim the elevator.”
On our flights across the country we, of course, encountered weather. In fact, for Richard Collins, weather was what made things interesting. Richard Collins loved flying because of the challenge of understanding and safely outwitting the weather through knowledge and skill. In the days before onboard Nexrad and CIP/FIP plots, I do not recall Dick cancelling a flight, although deviations and route changes were common. Most importantly, Dick understood aviation weather better than most meteorologists, and we students of Richard Collins read each month his caution that, regardless of what the forecast said, you really could never know the weather for sure until you got there. “What you see is what you get.” And he said it over and over: in a head-to-head between a thunderstorm and an airplane, the thunderstorm will win.
Dick’s amazing skills as a pilot and instructor became most apparent when the weather was bad. I remember a story that we did shortly after I earned my instrument rating while at FLYING. We were discussing a spate of accidents caused by pilots busting minimums and Dick had the idea of taking me on a flight in low IMC conditions – I was the guinea pig for a number of his stories – where I would have to encounter an actual missed approach for the first time. We flew the approach, and if it were possible to strangle an airplane with a choke hold on the yoke, 40RC would have died then and there. But in an airplane with Richard Collins present, the cockpit always was a place of calm.
The guinea pig for many of Richard’s flying experiments.
Dick talked me through the procedure, step by step. “Okay, you’re on the localizer, get ready for descent.” “Keep up your scan.” “How much further to minimums?” “100 feet to minimums.” “You’re at minimums.” “You’re AT minimums.” Richard Collins never raised his voice, but he spoke the words with an intensity that caused me to regain focus. I was confused by my ability to see straight down, but there was nothing at all in front of us. Can we descend further? Is this the airport environment? Negative. Power and pitch, flaps and gear and away we went. That was an incredibly valuable lesson to me. One of hundreds that I received in the left seat of 40RC.
In the years that followed our flights in 40RC, Dick and I spoke regularly about aviation and accidents and airplane safety. When I got my first Cirrus, I brought it to Frederick. Maryland, to show him the airplane. I hoped that he would be pleased that those hundreds of hours of lessons were not wasted. Today I use my Cirrus in much the same way he used 40RC – as year-round transportation though all sorts of weather. On that day, his only words were, “Fly safely, Patrick.”
But that was enough, because Dick had said and written so much that I carry with me to this day. And when I am flying a low approach or finding my way through an area of thunderstorms, or when my focus wants to drift at the wrong time, I still hear Dick’s calming words from the right seat. I am proud to be among a generation of pilots who had the honor and opportunity to learn from a true master and a true gentleman.
The post Learning from the master appeared first on Air Facts Journal.
from Engineering Blog https://airfactsjournal.com/2018/05/learning-from-the-master/
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militaryandgun · 3 years
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"The tradition continues. P210 CARRY. #SIG #SIGSAUER #NEVERSETTLE" を YouTube で見る
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