Walther P38 Serial Numbers Lookup
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Nov 04, 2007 Generally speaking, and with some exceptions, it is pretty straightforward to correlate postwar P38 serial numbers with the date of manufacture, which began in 1957 @ s/n 1001 and ended in the early 1990s @ around s/n 475,000.
OK, got back from range for first paper. This shoots GREAT. I can compare it to my CZ82 that I already was happy with and this shoots on par if not slightly better. Soft recoil, no snappiness. Only 8 rounds but at the range to keep the gun barrel cool, we usually shoot 5 at a time and reload or change guns anyway. This is bigger and a longer barrel than the CZ but shooting 9mm Luger is a plus.
My Cz will still be the one that is in the safe in the bedroom though. I'd still agree with others to get both and the CZ first cause of the Mag limit coming but I'm ecstatic with how it shoots right now, time will tell though. They replaced the barrel after one year? I've got no clue.
I don't know if the date on the slide is original to the frame or what. I don't know if they date the slide when the slide is made then its put on the frame or what. I don't know if it was built in 82 then reworked in 83 or built in 70's then reworked in 83 with an 82 slide. (one of the things I was hoping someone could answer here). You can see it the barrel has some wear on the outside but the inside is really clean and the lands all the way to the muzzle is sharp so someone took care of this or these are well built. Well, I got an expert opinion on the P1 from the Walther forums. Basically, the serial number on my P1 is dated back to the 50s.
So this gun he says likely went through a number of reworks and upgrades at the arsenal. Barrel, frame, slide would have all been replaced as the characteristics don't match a 50s era P1. There may not even be any original parts left other than the serial number itself. So it's all matching but rearsinaled/upgraded/reworked and then spent some time in service before being decommissioned.
I have a Walther P38 that I was trying to do some research on a few years ago but I remember running into a dead end. The backstory to this pistol is that it belonged to my great-grandfather who kept it in his glove compartment when he was CoP in Brewer, ME (in the 1950s). Drajver dlya lpt porta windows 7.
He didn't serve in WWII, so he didn't bring it back himsel (his son - my grandfather was in WWII, but before he died he denied bringing it back). You can see from the pictures that someone named Jim Fry has etched his name and serial number on the slide and grips with a 1944 on the other side of the grips. Inside of the grips someone else has also scratched his name and serial number - William Cymot. Neither of these two names was known to my family by the time I was old enough to ask about them (great granddad died before I was born). I can't find any of the 'ac' or 'cyq' or other marking on the gun, but then again I don't know where to look for them. The serial numbers all match and the number on the frame is followed by an eagle with an 'N' underneath it (I don't think you can see it in my camera phone photography). Here are the pictures: I would love to know the date of manufacture of this gun.
I'd also like to hear people's opinions on whether it would increase the value or decrease it to have the names removed (replace the grips, refinish the gun) - I know the general rule of thumb on guns is not to refinish, but these seem like pretty egregious markings. I don't know how I would ever feel about selling it - it's not really a family heirloom or anything. Nobody but me ever really gave a crap about it (I did shoot several thousand rounds through it when I was a teenager - I recently shot it and it still runs like a champ), and, to be honest, I'm not overjoyed about having anything that resembles WWII German stuff in my house. But at the end of the day I'll probably keep it - I'd just be curious as to how much it is worth and where and when it came from.
I think it's a post war gun, too, but I think it has grips from an older P38 on it. I just can't figure out why someone would carve his name and 1944 into the gun if he hadn't brought it back from WWII - it also seems coincidental there are two names both with their service numbers on the gun. That's the only reason I was hesitant to just call it a post war gun. I did look at that other forum but I am having a hard time finding the date information and honestly, I'm just not interested enough to register and post there in order to find this information. What they said, leave her as is. Just keep her clean and lubed.