It depends on which model and what condition it is in. If it is a common model, 229, 226, 220, etc, and it's in very good shape, it's probably worth $500-600. If it's anything else, it depends and we need more information.
What model, what condition, what year is the gun? You need to supply this information to get an answer.
No. The .357 SIG is a bottlenecked cartridge. It is fatter and longer than the 9mm Parabellum. ALSO, please note that many auto pistol cartridges headspace on the case mouth, and are VERY sensitive to length differences.
If they carry a gun at all, it is usually the M9 pistol, or a colt or S&W .38 Special revolver. ---- The .38 is rarely seen in the military any more. The primary handguns are the M9 Beretta 9 mm or the M11 SIG Sauer 9 mm (SIG P228).
Some folks rather have a 357 revolver then a 9 MM semi auto as a revolver if it misfires you just pull the trigger again If a semi auto misfires you lose the battle as you have to manually reject the ammo and hope the next round fires. Of all the semi autos I did fire I happen to like the sig 226 9 MM the best
Gun show, e-gunparts.com
100-500 or so depending on specifics
I know that kimber still makes a 10mm handgun.
0.004379
9mm means the firearm shoots a bullet that is about 9 millimeters wide.
There are 2.51 * 101 = 253.51 mm.
Value is too difficult to be accurate without seeing the gun. Condition which includes the amount of original finish and original configuration will determine value. Recommend taking it to a gun shop for appraisal.
Value is too difficult to be accurate without seeing the gun. Condition which includes the amount of original finish and original configuration will determine value. Recommend taking it to a gun shop for appraisal.