I have a buddy that bought a mag stamped on the bottom 455(for the 1911) for 10.00..He sold it on E-bay for 298.00US...So I am going to guess the gun has to be worth quite a bit!!
Has anyone wondered WHY the British had them chambered in .455? The .45ACP had been around for years, and if they could make the oddball .455 round, they certainly could have made the .45ACP round.
I have had three in .455 with the W prefix serial. All sold for over $1000.00 The highest was $1600.00 if I remember correctly.
The 455 Rimmed (Webly) is not the same cartridge as that used in the 455 1911. That used the 455 Automatic. So there was no advantage at all to the 455 round, except the "we are British, sah" one, lol. - dan
Probably less than an original .45, I'd guess maybe $600.
Also, the .455 Webley Auto came out in 1904, which was actually a year before .45 ACP.
I've got one with the W Prefix that was converted to .45 Cal. Is it worth anything?
Condition, when it was converted, by whom etc are all factors. If the barrel & mag are original old parts from the pistol's era and the finish is great I'd say it would be worth more tha $600. Got pics?
Mike
One more pic as I deleted one by mistake.
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According to Goddard's Government models page 266 your serial #W100865 was one of a 200 lot shipment that was sent to the British Ministry of Shipping on April 28th, 1919. If it had been made earlier I think the rampant Colt would be at the back of the slide, left side above the thumb safety. I think the grips are from a later period and if they are plastic, not wood then they definitley are much later. The 1919 grips should still be double diamond I'm pretty sure. I'd say the mag with the loop is more correct for the pistol's age. The slide stop, trigger and thumb safety are correct and that's good.
Mike



























