Barr
Member
FN 1910 started WWI.
I said in another thread that I wish Taurus would have made the TCP in 32acp.
The Ruger SP-101 and LCR in .327 Federal Magnum will both shoot .32 ACP -- no moonclips needed.--Six rounds of .32 ACP in a very light small frame revolver (Ruger LCR, S&W J-frame, etc.) with an ejector star made for the semi-rimless cases (moon clips would be fun, too);
I am also a fan of the .32ACP round. It works well for my wife so I guess that's why I started with them.
Beretta 1934
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You are correct. A typo on my part. I did correct it. Thanks!Pretty sure that is a 1935 rather than the 1934. I don't know of any Beretta 1934s that were not 9mm Corso (380 ). And all the 1935s were 7.65 (32acp).
I do like that model though and it has been my most often carried primary handgun for a long, long time. Mine's in somewhat rougher shape than your but still functions reliably and is amazingly accurate.
They did. The TCP PT732 was chambered in .32ACP. However, it differed from its Kel-Tec counterpart in that it did not hold an additional round when compared to its .380-chambered version; both Taurus TCP models held six rounds in their magazines. The PT732 was obviously not a huge seller, and was discontinued long before the PT738 was.
If I saw one for less than two bills somewhere, in good condition, I'd probably pick it up, though not for concealed carry, as I already have both the P32 and the PT738 for those pocket-pistol roles. I bet the PT732 would be a good little shooter, though.
Yep, I got lucky and picked up a PT-132Pro off of GB. Really fun pistol to shoot.Ratshooter, the PT132 will show up on Gunbroker every once in a while. I don't recall that mine was very expensive (my vague memory is $250-$300 plus FFL and shipping). In general it's not a hugely popular round, and not many folks are aware of that particular pistol
I don't understand this notion where if a new gun has an issue that it gets sent back for repair and immediately sold. Did you even try shooting it again?The last 32 ACP firearm I owned was a NAA Guardian. It would sometimes eject the next live round out the top of the gun after firing the previous one. Interesting defect that resulted in it being repaired and sold.
It's pretty hard to fault things that continue to work well when they are 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100+ years old.The .32 ACP was once very popular, especially in Europe, where it was known as the 7,65 Browning. It is somewhat yesteryear's cartridge.
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The 32 ACP can be made up into a fun little rifle. I am aware of several rimfire rifles that were converted to handle it. The one I shot was a tackdriver...and quiet.
Yeah I shot it a bit more, it was alright for a poker table gun. I bought it used and after warranty work used it in a trade for a 45. NAA's warranty is pretty good.I don't understand this notion where if a new gun has an issue that it gets sent back for repair and immediately sold. Did you even try shooting it again?