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  1. SAUER & SOHN, J. P. Location: Suhl and Eckernfoerde, Germany. Oldest firearms manufacturing firm in Germany. Founded in 1751 in Suhl. During this period the company produced high quality handguns and long guns. In 1938, it introduced a new double-action semi-automatic pistol, Sauer 38H. Pistol had the first decocking lever ever used on a mass ...

  2. Oct 30, 2021 · J.P. Sauer & Sohn of Suhl is the oldest firearm manufacturer in Germany, having been founded in 1751. The firm has produced all manner of firearms, including self-loading pistols starting around ...

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  4. Mar 5, 2018 · As such, it’s worth $950. Other things being equal, a pistol without this mark would be valued at about 20 percent less. Gun: Sauer 38H. Manufacturer: J.P. Sauer & Sohn, Suhl, Germany ...

  5. Sep 24, 2010 · Produced only in caliber 7,65mm (.32 ACP) during World War II, the Sauer 38 (H) outwardly appears little different than about a dozen other contemporaneous German pocket pistols in this caliber. The 38 (H) weighs 22 ounces (624 grams) empty. Overall length is 6.37 inches (163mm).

    • Peter G. Kokalis
  6. May 12, 2017 · WWII Pocket Pistols: J.P. Sauer & Sohn .38H. May 12, 2017 By Patrick Sweeney. It is fashionable in some circles to scorn the Germans in World War II for their near-chaotic firearms procurement system. In their defense — my late father was a European-theater combat vet, and I grasp the irony of my defending the Germans — when the boss man ...

  7. These few pistols represent one of the rarest variations of all Sauer production pistols. The Behördenmodell 1930 can be found up to serial number 230000 (highest number known 227700). Between 225744 and 230796 there was a production gap. After 220000 some Behördenmodell 1930 can be found without the trigger safety.

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sauer_38HSauer 38H - Wikipedia

    Fixed iron sights, front—blade, rear—notch. The Sauer 38H or often just H was a small semi-automatic pistol made in Nazi Germany from 1938 until just after the end of World War II by J. P. Sauer & Sohn, then based in Suhl, Germany. The "H" in the model number is short for "hahn", referring to the internal hammer of the firing mechanism.

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