No longer made.īeretta 92FS-C type M (1989) – single-stack version of Model 92FS-C, magazine capacity 8 rounds. All US Army M9 service pistols are modified to Beretta 92FS standard (Photo: Beretta)īeretta 92FS-C (1989) – a compact version of the Model 92FS, similar in dimensions to earlier model 92SB-C. Presently, all US Army M9 pistols are modified to 92FS standard. The pistol is the same as the model 92F except for the operations of the lever, which lost its safety lock function and is used only to safely decock the hammer.īeretta 92FS (1989) – a minor modification of the Model 92F, with an enlarged hammer pinhead that prevents the slide from flying back in the case of breakage.
#BERETTA M9 SAFETY LICENSE#
Also manufactured under license in France by GIAT Industries as the PA MAS G1. The barrel bore and chamber are chrome-plated.īeretta 92G (1989)- the so-called “Gendarmerie” version, created at the request of the Gendarmerie Nationale de France.
Evolved from the Model 92SB during American XM9 trials, with a slightly reshaped grip and trigger guard, also a different finish. Overall length was 197 mm, barrel length 103 mm, magazine capacity 13 rounds (also accepted standard 15-round magazines).īeretta 92SB-C type M (1983) – a slimmer version of the model 92SB-C, with a single-stack magazine that held only 8 rounds.īeretta 92F (1984) – initially designated 92SB-F, later renamed 92F. Discontinued since 1991.īeretta 92SB-C (1981) – Compact version of the model 92SB.
#BERETTA M9 SAFETY MANUAL#
The manual safety is ambidextrous, the magazine release relocated to the base of the trigger-guard. It was replaced in production by the Model 92SB.īeretta 92SB (1981) – a further evolution of model 92S, initially designated Model 92S-1, later designated 92SB with the introduction of the firing pin block. United States Army M9 pistol (Beretta 92) (Photo: XY) Models and Variants of Beretta 92īelow is a brief list of the most important modifications and versions produced in the Beretta 92-series over the last 30 years.īeretta 92S (1976) – first modification of the basic model 92, with non-ambidextrous slide-mounted safety/decocking and magazine release button set low in the left grip panel. At present, Beretta no longer makes Compact versions of the Model 92 in the firm’s product line these were replaced by the entirely different Model 8000 Cougar pistols. These compact versions had shortened grips, slides, and barrels Compact Type M versions also featured single-stack magazines with appropriately thinned grips. Beretta also produced several compact versions of their basic, full-size Model 92 variations. This resulted in the appearance of the Beretta Model 96 Brigadier pistols, and, later on, the same modification was applied to 9mm pistols, available as Beretta Model 92 Brigadier. Recognizing these weak points, the US INS (Immigration and Naturalization Service) requested Beretta to make their model 96 (.40 S&W caliber version of Model 92) with reinforced slides. This happened several times during the earlier years of Model 92F service in the US military, apparently because of metallurgical problems, combined with the “built-in” weak points in the slide where the locking block cuts are made.
The purpose of this safety is to prevent the rear of the slide from flying back into the firer’s face in the case of the sliding failure. With the introduction of the Model 92FS in the late 1980s, another unusual safety feature was fitted in the form of an enlarged head to the hammer pin. Sights on service models are of fixed type, with a dovetailed rear blade, usually with high-contrast inserts. Magazines are a double stack, with the magazine release button located at the base of the trigger-guard on all 92-series pistols made since 1981. All pistols of current production are fitted with an automatic firing pin block safety. Some other models, such as the Model 92D, are double-action-only pistols with no manual safety or decocking. On some pistols, such as the Model 92G adopted in France, the levers do not lock themselves in the lowered position but return to the “fire” position once released – their function is limited only to safe decocking of the hammer.