
If payment arrangements are not made within one week following the auction, your credit card may be charged. Credit card information is requested as part of the registration process. Firearms purchases are subject to a $15 background check fee.Īll purchases are to be paid for either by cash, check, cashier's check, bank wire, VISA, Mastercard or Discover, during or immediately after each Auction.

If you are not a resident of Oregon, you must have a current Federal Firearms License to take delivery of firearms, or have an FFL holder in your state take delivery of firearms for you. The Auctioneer has sole discretion in the acceptance of bids and in the determination of the highest bidder.Īll State and Federal laws will be observed regarding the sale of handguns. On the fall of the Auctioneer's hammer, title to the offered lot or article passes to the highest bidder who assumes full risk and responsibility thereof. By bidding, you agree to these Conditions of Sale.Ī Premium of Twenty-Three Percent (20% Buyer's Premium + 3% online fee) of the successful bid price will be added to the bid prices and is payable by the buyer as part of the total purchase price. Ulm marked the slides and differentially heat treated them by oil hardening plus electrical induction hardening in the area of the safety lever then the slides were polished and blued (which is why the blue on Walther-marked slides is brighter and does not match the frame blue).All property is sold "AS IS", and neither O'Gallerie nor the Consignor makes any representation or warranty, expressed or implied, as to the merchantability, fitness, or condition of the property or as to the correctness of description, genuineness, attribution, provenance or period of the property. That is why PP-series pistols that were machined by Manurhin (from special forgings specified by Walther and supplied from Germany, it is worth noting) that were to become 'German' Walthers were shipped to Ulm with 'soft' slides. Quote:A hardened slide cannot be successfully roll-marked. At first the PPK/S was made in Germany, then both it and the PP were made by Interarms in the U.S., under Walther license.Jim.

Combining the slide and barrel of the PPK with the frame of the PP solved the problem by gaining enough 'points' to qualify for importation. He made sure the PP would pass OK (and the 'junk' Browning 1910 would not), but there was a problem with the PPK because of its size. One of the board members had ties to Interarms, then the authorized Walther distributor for the U.S.
