![]() As part of that process, I picked up the used Smith and Wesson Model 39-2 shown here. So lasting, that I am getting ready to build an ASP clone. ![]() The smooth lines, transparent grips and unique guttersnipe sight left a lasting impression of the ASP. I was first bitten by the ASP (and Smith 39) bug in the 1994 when my friend handed me the coolest pistol I had ever seen. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 via Commons – Later, the steel frame was replaced with an aluminum alloy. The first Model 39s had steel frames and slides. ![]() Borrowing heavily from the German P38 pistol, which impressed its US counterparts, the Model 39 was used by various law enforcement agencies, adopted by the SEALs in Vietnam as the infamous “Hushpuppy” (see Small Arms Review, The Hushpuppy) and later served as the basis for the iconic ASP Pistol designed by Paris Theodore- a revolutionary compact handgun that incorporated many ideas that are common to contemporary defensive handguns. The year was 1954 and the pistol was the Smith and Wesson Model 39. Thirty-one years before the United States military adopted the the M9 Beretta as its primary service pistol, Smith and Wesson designed and submitted a 9mm double action pistol for military trials.
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