


The SIG Sauer P220 pistol was a landmark design and more
than three decades later, all the features that made the P220 a
great pistol are still there. Add in the .45 ACP chambering and
it’s easy to see why the
accurate and reliable P220 is a top performer.
By Wiley Clapp, Field Editor
The semi-automatic pistol scene in the early 1970s was a lot different than it is today. There were fewer producers, and they didn’t offer as many variations. There were no polymer-frame guns, and the choices in trigger systems were few. You could choose a single-action gun, like the Colt and Browning, or a variation of the Walther-inspired double-action/single-action.

But the German police were in the market for a new service 9 mm Luger
handgun, and that started some mighty clever minds to turning. Eventually,
the German police pistol trials produced the Walther P5 and the Heckler & Koch
P7, but the gun in the middle was the SIG Sauer P6, a size variation
on the Swiss/German consortium’s P220. The other two pistols are
almost forgotten, but the P220 is still here, and it has changed
relatively little in the 35 years since introduced. One might conclude
that they got it right the first time. They did—and the P220 has
become a familiar friend to handgunners nationwide.
The P220 was a single-column, recoil-operated semi-automatic pistol
with a first-shot double-action and subsequent-shot single-action
trigger system. Imported and sold by Hawes and Interarms in the early
’70s, it was also offered by Browning as the BDA for a time. Eventually,
SIG Sauer established a U.S. company in Herdon, Va., for the purpose
of selling its own pistols, before moving to its present location
in Exeter, N.H., in 1985.
The first P220s were built in 7.65 and 9 mm Parabellum, with small
numbers added in .38 Super. When the gun came to America, .45 ACP
was added to suit Yankee tastes. Today, P220s are only available
in .45 ACP. Other calibers are in the extensive SIG catalog, but
in different models. The first P220s reflected European tastes in
other ways (such as the magazine catch location), but they had a
host of innovations by anybody’s criteria. Mechanically, the gun
was different in that it used a multi-piece slide formed from heavy
sheet steel and fitted with a separate pinned-in breechblock. This
feature made it easier to finish the gun in any caliber. Another
significant innovation was the use of the ejection port as a locking
point for the barrel. P220 barrels have a squared hood. Cams on the
barrel’s underside work against a steel block in the aluminum receiver
to index the barrel hood into the ejection port when the slide closes
in battery. This feature has been copied all over the world.

However, it was an operational feature that distinguished
the pistol in the wildly expanding marketplace of the ’70s and ’80s.
The P220 had (and still has on most variations) a first-shot DA trigger
pull. When the hammer is down in the carry mode, trigger pressure
through an arc will raise the hammer to the fully ready position
and then release it to fire. On firing, the slide cycles the hammer
to the fully cocked position and the next trigger pull is a short
and crisp single action. If the shooter needs to stop shooting, he
can safely decock the hammer with a quick, downward press of the
decocking lever. The point is simply that the P220 doesn’t have,
and doesn’t need, a manual safety mixed into the functions of this
lever. That is not the case with most of the P220’s contemporaries.
The P220 caught on big time, particularly in the law enforcement
sector. With such a simple operating system, police instructors found
the gun rather easy to teach, although the DA-to-SA transition was
tough for some people to master. When other calibers became popular—9
mm, .40 S&W and .357 SIG—the company modified the basic pistol
system to accept high-capacity magazines in these calibers and gave
them different designations—P226, P228 and P229.
Over the many years the P220 has been imported, there have
been numerous small changes to the gun. One of the most welcome was one of the
earliest—a late ’80s moving of the heel-mounted magazine catch to
a more desirable spot aft of the trigger guard. In the past few years,
the upgrades and modifications have come thick and fast, adding up
to a major expansion of the P220 lineup. The current SIG Sauer catalog
shows 16 .45 ACP P220 variations. By the time you add in finish and
lockwork options, the number of variations has doubled. All of them
are the same basic pistol, but SIG Sauer has responded to the desires
of its customers by providing options in the size and finish of the
gun, as well as the manner in which it is handled and fired—the lockwork.
The four sample pistols display all of the new options except
finish. Also, there are two variations of the Elite P220 series that have
stainless steel frames. All of the other models are made with aluminum
alloy frames. Further, all of the current P220 slides are machined
stainless forgings—yesteryear’s stamped slides and pinned-in breechblocks
are no longer used. The majority of models have the original double-action/single-action
trigger system that permits safe, hammer-down carry and a first shot
double-action trigger pull. It is sometimes called a “decocker, no-safety”
system. But SIG now offers two options to this original trigger system—a
pure single-action (or SAO, for single-action-only) and the DAK (for
double-action, Kellerman). This latter option is a form of double-action-only,
in which the trigger must be swept through a long arc for each shot.

Going first to a standard size gun, we find the
typical P220 with 4.4" barrel and slide made of matte-finished
stainless steel. Most commonly, this variation will be encountered
with the original DA/SA lockwork, but my sample came with the SAO
system. This gives the shooter a single-action trigger, complete
with frame-mounted, down-to-fire ambidextrous safety. There is no
decocking lever since the gun is intended to be managed in the manner
of the Hi-Power or M1911. I noticed that the slide can be racked
with the thumb safety up. For some situations, this is a very worthwhile
feature. The trigger pull was very good, breaking with a small amount
of creep at just under 6 lbs. As a veteran SIG shooter, I found much
about this gun to be familiar; the SAO trigger would take time to
fully master.
The next gun was a beauty—the P220 Match. On this one, the
trigger system was the old familiar DA/SA. Naturally the gun is also available
with the new SAO trigger, which might be a better idea if the shooter
was using the gun in competition. SIG Sauer equips the P220 Match
with a new and beautifully crafted rear sight. It is a fully click-adjustable
(windage and elevation) sight that is mounted very low in the slide
by means of a sturdy dovetail. It’s obvious that serious design effort
went into beveling the sides of the sight for use in speed-oriented
action games. At the same time, the sight’s rear face presents a
precise sight picture. The P220 Match is about 3 ozs. heavier than
the standard P220, and all of the extra weight is out front at the
muzzle. That’s because the company made the Match gun with a 5” barrel
and slide. This gives the pistol a muzzle-heavy heft. It also tends
to dampen the recoil thrust a little bit. The Match version is a
good-looking gun that handles even better. If you are after a greater
level of performance, there is also a Super Match variant.
If SIG added a half-inch of slide and barrel to the standard P220
to produce the Match, removing a like amount might have a good effect
for other reasons. It absolutely does, and the resulting gun is called
the P220 Carry. The Carry is the marriage of a shortened 3.9" barrel
and the standard receiver. Intended for use in concealed carry roles,
the Carry gun is easier than the standard gun to manipulate from
under a coat or loose shirt. For a defensive carry gun, the sample’s
trigger system is just about perfect. It is a DAK. A form of DAO,
the DAK trigger fires with a 7-lb., double-action sweep of the trigger
for every shot. The hammer cannot be cocked in the conventional sense,
and is therefore neither a safety nor a decocker. Shooters who use
the DAK system often fall in love with it. My experience with the
system is limited, but it seems obvious that learning where the trigger
reset point is located, then also learning to allow the trigger to
go to that point and not beyond, is the key to proper DAK shooting.
People who study police shootings and really delve into tactical
training are aware that a second gun has saved the life of more than
one police officer. The same is true of civilian encounters. Second
guns need to be small and so do concealed carry pistols in general.
The P220 Compact is as small as they can make a P220 .45. Using the
same 3.9" barrel and slide upper as the P220 Carry keeps the
length concealable. On my sample Compact, the trigger system goes
back to the P220’s roots. It’s the old familiar DA/SA that helped
earn SIG’s current strong position in the marketplace. The butt shortening
resulted in a pretty limited handle to grip, but SIG recognized the
problem and put a finger extension on the forward end of the magazine
floorplate.
These four P220 pistols pretty well summarize a nicely varied
line of modern .45s. There are four size variations, three lockwork choices
and a number of finish options. Certain models are done up with handsome
wooden grips and other cosmetic enhancements in the company’s custom
shop. The Elite series is not represented here. They are upgraded
standard-size P220s, all with a distinguishing feature of the beavertail
grip tang. Before I did the tabulated accuracy evaluation, I fired
all of the guns for general function and suitability for their roles.
No malfunctions of any kind cropped up, and the only adverse comment
I could make was that magazines are sometimes a little difficult
to load.
I had no more than fired the first two or three five-shot groups
with the first gun in the Ransom Rest than I began to suspect that
it was going to be a pretty good shoot. I used three different commercial
loads that have turned in impressive performance in the past. They
were Hornady’s 200-gr. JHP/XTP, Remington’s 230-gr. Bonded Golden
Saber JHP and Black Hills 230-gr. JHP (featuring Speer’s Gold Dot
bullet). With three loads, firing five, consecutive five-shot groups
from each of the four pistols, I was at the range for a while. Accuracy
results were more than impressive.
There were groups as small as 0.47" and only one went over 3",
but the majority were under 2". In a five-group average, a few
sub one-inchers really pull the overall average down, and that is
what happened here. By the time the averaging was all done, the overall
P220 group size was 1.61".
I suspect that the relatively tight chambers and exact barrel
crowns may be a part of it, but in the final analysis the accuracy is good
because the SIG P220s are just fine guns. Not having fired everything
available in a similar shoot, I can’t objectively say these pistols
are better than everything. But on the other hand, I don’t really
know of any service-grade pistol that will consistently outshoot
a P220.
SIG P220
Manufacturer: SIG Sauer (Dept. AR), 18 Industrial Drive,
Exeter, NH 03833; (603) 772-2302; www.sigarms.com
Caliber: .45 ACP
Action Type: recoil-operated, center-fire, semi-automatic
pistol
Frame: aluminum alloy
Slide: stainless steel
Barrel: 4.40"
Rifling: six-groove, 1:16" LH twist
Magazine: detachable box, eight rounds
Sights: post front with Tritium dot, twin dot rear
Trigger Pull: 5 lbs., SAO
Overall Length: 7.70"
Width: 1.50"
Height: 5.50"
Weight: 31.2 ozs.
Accessories: lockable hard case, lock, manual, spare magazine
Suggested Retail Price: $960