Specimens were marked PS and some also were sold commercially from about 1920 to 1930. (Brng.) This was a greatly modified version of the 1915 Type, with an original barrel mounting, changed safety lever, internal hammer, straight grip frame, metal grip plates, magazine capacity of 8 ctges., and 6-R rifling. It was covered by 1915 patents and discontinued in 1919.ġ915, 1919 Type-7.65 mm. It was made for Italian army and police use only and was marked PS (Pubblica Sicurezza, public security) for police use or RE (Regio Esercito) for army use. It had straight grip frame, wood grips, magazine capacity of 7 cartridges, and 6-R rifling. (Brng.) This was a blowback with internal hammer, Mauser pocket pistol type of barrel mounting, and a firing pin which acted as ejector. Anyone have a copy of a gun serial number book? Beretta's website serial number lookup only goes back to 1950 or 1970 or something like that.ġ915 Type-7.65 mm. For recent pistols this mark is usually located on the frame near the trigger guard, for older pistols, the mark is on the slide or on the frame behind the grip area. The chart below is used to identify the year by this mark. No publicly available serialization that I can dig up. Beretta firearms produced in Italy carry a proof mark for the year of production. ![]() There is a serious lack of information on the internets about this thing.
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