I never liked the fake comp and 5 inch barrel on my p22, but loved shooting it so….
I first decided that the barrel needed to be shorted to the min restricted barrel length. The design of the barrel and sleeve make this a pretty straight forward operation with the tap and dia (8mm x.75) available from most tool supply outfits. After the cut it looked like this.
I had seen a couple of P22s with cans and decided that mine needed a fake one to make use of the threads on the end of the barrel and cause it looked cool. After an hour or so on the lathe it looked like this.
But what I really wanted was functional comp. The slide is quite angular so the set-up took a little bit of time to work out, but the finished product looks so much better that the jewellery that Walter sold the gun with. It also works very well and becomes more effective with higher/hyper velocity ammunition.
I have to say that it turned out as well as I had hoped and was a worthy challenge of my budding machining skills.
On a side note, this is my first post with pics so I hope the links work as intended and apologize for anything I have done incorrectly.
Cheers
Jim
I first decided that the barrel needed to be shorted to the min restricted barrel length. The design of the barrel and sleeve make this a pretty straight forward operation with the tap and dia (8mm x.75) available from most tool supply outfits. After the cut it looked like this.


I had seen a couple of P22s with cans and decided that mine needed a fake one to make use of the threads on the end of the barrel and cause it looked cool. After an hour or so on the lathe it looked like this.

But what I really wanted was functional comp. The slide is quite angular so the set-up took a little bit of time to work out, but the finished product looks so much better that the jewellery that Walter sold the gun with. It also works very well and becomes more effective with higher/hyper velocity ammunition.




I have to say that it turned out as well as I had hoped and was a worthy challenge of my budding machining skills.
On a side note, this is my first post with pics so I hope the links work as intended and apologize for anything I have done incorrectly.
Cheers
Jim
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