stencollector
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- shilo MB, the armpit of Canada
How about a Liberator .45 ACP converted to a 106.7 mm barrel? Here is mine:
I have a P7 and have been wondering why the P7M8 is nearly $1000 more than I paid for my P7.
A bit late on this one. One needs to consider length, overall length vs barrel length, width, weight, height, grip length.
To be legal in Canada the major consideration asides from the evil list and the evil calibres is the barrel length. So, if one chooses a handgun with the smallest amount of metal BEHIND that barrel, one is choosing the SHORTEST handgun.
However, after many months of playing I have still yet to come up with a decision on what is the smallest handgun suitable for my purposes, legal in Canada.
My votes would have to go to the H&K P7series (P7M8 and P7PSP) which are both outstanding handguns, deadly accurate with somewhat less muzzle flip, etc., than most others due to fixed barrel and inline gas discharge recoil assembly (piston). It is only in 9mm mind you, but the latest tests have shown that there is not much difference between effectiveness in stopping bears, etc., with a 9mm or .45 using 'engineered' rounds. One needs to move up to .44 magnum and that ilk in order to see a significant improvement in effectiveness, with that 44 magnum being a real humdinger in terms of wound channel and energy transfer. Dirty Harry had it right.
I happen to like the smaller calibres: 9mm, .40 and .45 and there is not a huge difference between them regardless of the old wives' tales that continue to float around (when using engineered rounds like Gold Dots or Federal Hydra Shocks, etc.)
And if you are thinking in terms of small, then you need to be thinking of the H&K P7's. We own two P7M8's and they are lovely guns. Also own two P7PSP's and they too are nice. Only issue is the price I guess. The P7M8's run at around $2,000 and spare magazines at about $80 each.
To be legal in Canada the major consideration asides from the evil list and the evil calibres is the barrel length.
How about a Liberator .45 ACP converted to a 106.7 mm barrel? Here is mine:
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That's cheatin ain't it ??
Some ambitious young cop or CFO inspector looking for a promotion might contend that the frame of the gun in the picture stops where the ring intersects the barrel and charge you if you don't have a 12-6 RPAL and you'll spend a year in court and $10K paying your lawyer & a firearms expert to testify for you proving it isn't.......even though it is probably currently registered as a restricted firearm.
Not quite sure what the intersection of the trigger guard over the barrel has to do with overall barrel length.
I cleared what I was doing with the Senior Firearms Technologist of the RCMP Firearms Support Services directorate before I undertook the conversion. The extra 5 mm of barrel are not an extension, the whole barrel is a recycled sten barrel, bored out to .45 cal and chambered for the .45 ACP. I ended up at 106.7 mm including the crown. I could have gone a bit shorter, but a simple hiccup and the lathe would have taken it too short.
I don't have 12.6, and this Liberator is likely the first one in Canada properly registered as restricted. There is another in the system registered as 110mm, but it was unverified.
I cleared what I was doing with the Senior Firearms Technologist of the RCMP Firearms Support Services directorate before I undertook the conversion.
What's the main difference between the P7 & P7M8? Is it the added heat shield? I have a P7 and have been wondering why the P7M8 is nearly $1000 more than I paid for my P7.
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