Wow! After close examination of the photo, I can say 100% that the gun is not real. It’s a rubber training gun “A rubber sig 226”, look where the slide meets the barrel, “the ejection port”, It’s moulded, as in one piece. There is no slide release, safety, decocker or break down tab and the sights are comically wide and useless. Look up sig 226 and look for yourselves. As the Police song goes, “You gotta turn on that gas light… False flag…… turn on that gas light… false flag.”
Okay, that is definitely NOT a Sig 226. It lacks the lengthwise shelf on the side of the slide. Since it is a flipped image, you are seeing what is really the right side of the gun. The slide release, safety/decocker, and disassembly tab are located on the left side, which is what this flipped view is NOT showing. The sights are completely kosher. Wide is good for close combat shooting. I'm willing to wait for the gun to be identified. (I'm leaning toward it being a Taurus, which is a South American brand.)
The muzzle is 80% in shadow, so if anyone can see rifling, you have a marvelous monitor. Never any problem seeing the junction line between slide and frame.
lol you shouldn't be able to see rifling on the barrel, and not the distinct line where the the slide meets the lower and where the barrel and ejection port should ALL be extremely defined if you can see rifling at this distance.
Wow! After close examination of the photo, I can say 100% that the gun is not real. It’s a rubber training gun “A rubber sig 226”, look where the slide meets the barrel, “the ejection port”, It’s moulded, as in one piece. There is no slide release, safety, decocker or break down tab and the sights are comically wide and useless. Look up sig 226 and look for yourselves. As the Police song goes, “You gotta turn on that gas light… False flag…… turn on that gas light… false flag.”
Okay, that is definitely NOT a Sig 226. It lacks the lengthwise shelf on the side of the slide. Since it is a flipped image, you are seeing what is really the right side of the gun. The slide release, safety/decocker, and disassembly tab are located on the left side, which is what this flipped view is NOT showing. The sights are completely kosher. Wide is good for close combat shooting. I'm willing to wait for the gun to be identified. (I'm leaning toward it being a Taurus, which is a South American brand.)
The muzzle is 80% in shadow, so if anyone can see rifling, you have a marvelous monitor. Never any problem seeing the junction line between slide and frame.
Good eye, does look pretty fake...
But it does look like there's some spiraling in the barrel, do they do that on training pistols?
lol you shouldn't be able to see rifling on the barrel, and not the distinct line where the the slide meets the lower and where the barrel and ejection port should ALL be extremely defined if you can see rifling at this distance.
If you zoom in the muzzle looks to be other than a smooth bore.
It does seem to be more pronounced than rifling, especially given the fuzziness at zoom.