Sig P226 center fire conversion kit

docker 01

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Hi there
Just purchased a Sig P226 classic .22 with the intention to get the 9mm center fire conversion kit.
Went to my local gun shop and was told you cant up size to the 9mm you can only go from 9mm to rim-fire conversion.
If anybody has any info on this matter it would be very much appreciated.
Thanks
 
It used to cost less money to buy a 22LR and a 9mm conversion kit than it did to buy a 9mm 226, so they stopped selling them. Kind of hard to blame them to be honest.

The sort of good news is that you can find 9mm conversions on the EE from time to time.
 
Congratulations on your purchase of a SIG P226, docker01. It's a sweet and reliable gun in any version and I'm convinced you'll love it for years to come.

As for the answer you dealer gave you, well your dealer is plain wrong and was probably trying to upsell you to a 9mm.

I own P226s in 22LR and 9mm and I go back and forth between the frames and slides without any issue.

Check out the first question/answer on SIG Sauer FAQ:

"Centerfire Kits (9mm,.357 & .40) are intended for use on .22 Classic Framed Pistols."

Source: https://www.sigsauer.com/support/faqs/

You do not need to read further if you are just looking at converting your 22LR to 9mm. You can and that's precisely what SIG says the 9mm kit was made for.

The rest of my post is just a personal rant about something else SIG states on their FAQ.

SIG's answer goes on to recommend against using a 40/357 SIG conversion on a 9mm frame, and in the same breath they're saying it's OK to run these conversion kits on a 22LR frame, which makes absolutely zero sense. If the 22LR frame is strong enough to accept 9mm, 40 S&W and 357 SIG conversion kits, there is no logical reason why you couldn't put a 40 S&W/357 SIG conversion kit on a 9mm frame as well.

I think the bean counters at SIG Sauer are trying to upsell 9mm owners because they make more money selling a whole new 40/357 gun instead of a just a conversion kit.
 
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Congratulations on your purchase of a SIG P226, docker01. It's a sweet and reliable gun in any version and I'm convinced you'll love it for years to come.

As for the answer you dealer gave you, well your dealer is plain wrong and was probably trying to upsell you to a 9mm.

I own P226s in 22LR and 9mm and I go back and forth between the frames and slides without any issue.

Check out the first question/answer on SIG Sauer FAQ:

"Centerfire Kits (9mm,.357 & .40) are intended for use on .22 Classic Framed Pistols."

Source: https://www.sigsauer.com/support/faqs/

You do not need to read further if you are just looking at converting your 22LR to 9mm. You can and that's precisely what SIG says the 9mm kit was made for.

The rest of my post is just a personal rant about something else SIG states on their FAQ.

SIG's answer goes on to recommend against using a 40/357 SIG conversion on a 9mm frame, and in the same breath they're saying it's OK to run these conversion kits on a 22LR frame, which makes absolutely zero sense. If the 22LR frame is strong enough to accept 9mm, 40 S&W and 357 SIG conversion kits, there is no logical reason why you couldn't put a 40 S&W/357 SIG conversion kit on a 9mm frame as well.

I think the bean counters at SIG Sauer are trying to upsell 9mm owners because they make more money selling a whole new 40/357 gun instead of a just a conversion kit.

Before the conversion kits were available, there were barrel companies making drop in barrels (to be used to appropriate mags). That wasn't recommended since it wasn't factory but most were reliable.

The SIG conversion kits of any caliber 9mm/.40S&W/357SIG/.22LR all work on the P226 frame. There is no design/structural difference
 
Thanks for the link and the advise.
That was one of the reasons I purchased the Sig P226 was for the conversion kits but was surprised by the comments of my local gun shop.
I will be on the hunt for a 9mm conversion kit.
Thanks again
 
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