They were originally made in 7.65mm Luger (.30 Luger) but many were rebarreled to 9mm Parabellum (9mm Luger). Have a gunsmith check it.
Yes, Yes
on top of the luger, where the barrel goes into the receiver ther is (usuaally) a date. On the left side of the frame, just down from the date is the serial number. Usually not more then 4 numbers
Try Jan Still
Good answer below. The "9mm Luger" is properly the 9mm Parabellum, but it is also called the Luger. There are about a dozen different cartridges with 9mm in their name, but the 9mm Luger is the best known.
look on top of receiver, near barrel, and you will see a date year. that is when it was made.
probably If the pistol is designed for 9mm Luger, 9mm Para, or 9x19, yes.
Browning.com has the list of serial numbers for all models. ds
Yes it is. The 9mm Parabellum ( latin for "For War" ) was invented by Georg Luger for his Luger 9mm semi-automatic pistol. Thus they just called it the 9mm luger round. Both names are correct for the same round.
Please check your serial number again and see if there is a serial number prefix such as 69C or 70C etc.which would be before the actual serial number?If this is the case,please include this in your question to get the correct year of manufacturing.
no, any weapon that fires the 9mm luger ammo to include the british sten gun...
Yes. 9mm Luger is the 9x19 cartridge, also known as the 9mm Parabellum, and that's what the 9mm Sigma is chambered for.