Tag Archives: P-226

Put those German Sigs in the safe

In 1951, arms maker J. P. Sauer und Sohn GmbH relocated from Suhl in then Soviet-occupied East Germany and set up shop in Eckernförde near the city of Kiel.

In 1976, the firm was purchased by Swiss firearms giant SIG, forming Sig Sauer– largely to have an outlet to fulfill overseas orders for guns like the P220 without having to cut through layers of Swiss red tape.

This also led to a huge series of West German police contracts for the P225/P6 handgun.

After that, Sig Sauer came to America, where it has expanded operations in a big way ever since. Today, the U.S. branch of the company employs 2,300 and is responsible for most of the recent R&D.

Meanwhile, the original German branch of Sig Sauer has atrophied to just 130 employees.

By 2021, there will reportedly be -zero- left in Germany.

More in my column at Guns.com.

A tale of 10,000 troopers: SIG lands state police contracts left and right

In the world of domestic law enforcement, some of the largest and best-respected departments in the country are those of the state police and highway patrols. It only makes sense that the firearms they carry and use tend to be the subject of attention by not only other agencies seeking to cut to the chase, but also by civilian shooters looking for proven self-defense guns. Well, in the past month no less than three states have gone SIG.

pa-state-police-penn-live
Read the rest in my column at University of Guns