Hi All,
I finally received an Inglis HP I purchased last August. At the time I thought it might be my last chance to get one, so I purchased a rather cheap example out of an auction. When I opened it up today I was a little annoyed as my first impression was that it was a lunchbox gun. It had no visible serial numbers and the finish on the frame and slide were different. Upon closer examination I was very surprised to find almost no markings and further shocked when I disassembled it. The frame weights almost nothing, its featherlight. It has to be aluminum or some other very light alloy. The magazine also has an aluminum follower. The only numerical markings are a 7 behind the magazine well and the roman numeral II in two locations on parts of the frame. The is a faint marking on the breech of the barrel and below and left of the ejection port on the slide.
Given the extreme rarity of the experimental Inglis lightweight frames I can only assume this is a later component that someone happened to put an Inglis barrel and slide onto. However, the very few markings and the location of the 7 stamp behind the mag leave me questioning what the origin of the frame might have been. I'd appreciate any help figuring out what exactly I have here.
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I finally received an Inglis HP I purchased last August. At the time I thought it might be my last chance to get one, so I purchased a rather cheap example out of an auction. When I opened it up today I was a little annoyed as my first impression was that it was a lunchbox gun. It had no visible serial numbers and the finish on the frame and slide were different. Upon closer examination I was very surprised to find almost no markings and further shocked when I disassembled it. The frame weights almost nothing, its featherlight. It has to be aluminum or some other very light alloy. The magazine also has an aluminum follower. The only numerical markings are a 7 behind the magazine well and the roman numeral II in two locations on parts of the frame. The is a faint marking on the breech of the barrel and below and left of the ejection port on the slide.
Given the extreme rarity of the experimental Inglis lightweight frames I can only assume this is a later component that someone happened to put an Inglis barrel and slide onto. However, the very few markings and the location of the 7 stamp behind the mag leave me questioning what the origin of the frame might have been. I'd appreciate any help figuring out what exactly I have here.
IMG_1570
IMG_1571
IMG_1576
IMG_1572
IMG_1573
IMG_1574
IMG_1575
IMG_1581
IMG_1582
IMG_1583
IMG_1584
IMG_1579
IMG_1580
IMG_1577
IMG_1578
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