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A Hammerli .

22 For Under 400 Dollars 5/5/11 1:24 AM

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A Hammerli .22 For Under $400!


By Dick Metcalf, Technical Editor, Shooting Times.

SIG may be calling its new Hammerli Trailside .22 LR auto pistol a “plinker,” and it may be priced like a “plinker,” but it
shoots like a precision match-grade competition gun.

here are few handgun shooters around the globe who would not agree that the name Hammerli of Switzerland has long been a world
standard for excellence and accuracy in precision .22 target pistol design and manufacture. If you wanted one
before this year, it would have cost you at least $1700 or more even for the least expensive Hammerli pistols;
top-of-the-line world-class competition versions like the carbon-fiber-frame Model 280 go for well over $2000. But
now comes the new SIG/Hammerli Trailside, a full-featured .22 Long Rifle sport autoloader imported by SIGARMS
(Hammerli is part of the SIG group) that will shoot .75-inch groups at 25 yards all day long with just about any
kind of .22 ammo you care to feed it with a manufacturer’s recommended retail price of less than $400 for its
standard version! That puts it right in the same price park as popular versions of the Ruger Mark II .22 autos and
the S&W Model 22 series.

Actually, I’m doing the Trailside an injustice by calling it a .75-inch gun. In the Trailside pistol’s
box is a laminated medallion containing that individual gun’s actual five-round, 25-meter factory SPECS
test target fired with standard-grade ammunition from a machine rest; in the dozen that I have SIG/Hammerli Trailside
checked, not one wasn’t a single ragged hole. The factory no-go specification is automatic .22 LR SA Semiauto Pistol
rejection for any Trailside that groups larger than one inch at 25 meters coming off the line.
Shooting handheld from a sandbag benchrest with a 10X scope with both pistols used in this
review, I fired several center-to-center groups of .25 inch with each of the gun’s preferred loads, Distributor .........................SIGARMS Inc.
and the best average posted was only 0.1 inch greater than the bullet diameter. The new Trailside Corporate Park
is a very impressive piece of work. Exeter, NH 03862
Model ...........................................Trailside
Loaded With Features
Equally impressive as the Trailside’s raw accuracy potential is the array of features that are Operation .....................Straight-blowback
included in the new gun’s Standard and Target Packages. single-action semiauto
Caliber .................................22 Long Rifle
Both are available in either 4.5- or six-inch barrel length. The Standard Package features molded Barrel length .........................6.00 inches
black sandpaper-finish polymer grips with ambidextrous thumbrest/trigger finger grooves and a
(4.5-inch barrel also available)
drift-adjustable rear sight notch; the suggested retail price is $398 for either barrel length. The
Target Package offers smooth, laminated wood grips in the same basic shape and a click-
Overall length .......................9.25 inches
adjustable precision target-grade rear sight; the suggested retail is $489 for either barrel length. Weight, empty ..30 ounces (w/magazine)
Other than those small differences, the Target and Standard versions are exactly the same, with Safety .................................Slide-mounted
matte black barrel/frame assembly and operating parts and a satiny natural-metal finish slide manual hammerblock
carrying laser-engraved manufacturer and model markings.
Sights .............................Screw-adjustable
target-type rear,
Common features on all Trailsides include a left-side slide lock that retains
integral semi-Patridge blade front
the slide open after the last round in the magazine is fired and a drop-free
(Target Package); drift-adjustable
magazine release button positioned Model 1911-fashion behind the trigger
rear (Standard Package)
guard. There is no magazine disconnect safety, so the gun can be fired
with the magazine removed as long as there is a cartridge in the chamber. Sight radius ..........................8.06 inches
The one-piece, black, molded polymer magazine (one per gun) is designed Rifling ..................6 grooves, 1:16 RH twist
to fit flush within the base of the grip, and it has a forward recurve on its Stocks ............................Laminated wood
base that forms part of the frontstrap when in place. The manual safety is (Target Package);
a hammerblock with lever positioned on the left rear side of the slide black polymer grips
where it can easily be actioned by a right-hand shooter’s thumb without (Standard Package)

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A Hammerli .22 For Under 400 Dollars 5/5/11 1:24 AM

(Standard Package)
breaking grasp. Up is “Safe,” down is “Fire.”
Magazine capacity ................10 rounds
A screw-attach interchangeable under-barrel frame extension is available in Finish ...........................Black frame/barrel;
either short or long versions, either polymer or steel, which provides for a natural matte slide
variety of weight and balance combinations for all versions and barrel Price ....................$489 (Target Package);
lengths. All Trailsides come from the factory with the polymer version, $389 (Standard Package)
either short or long depending on barrel length for a flush-with-the-muzzle appearance. The
muzzle itself is square cut, with the bore face recessed for protection and crowned at 11 degrees.

Mechanically the action is a simple, straight blowback with single-action, hammer-fired (not striker) operation. The
extractor is external, and the ejector is internal. Trigger pull is two stage, coming back in the initial phase to bear
against a spring-loaded plunger within an adjustable screw stop, which provides positive tension in the final stage of
the pull. Trigger overtravel is adjustable, but the pull weight is fixed and set at the factory not to exceed 1400
grams (3.09 pounds). Actual pull weights on the two review samples Shooting Times received were 2.68 and 2.89
pounds and were as crisp as any fixed-weight trigger pulls I have ever felt on any pistols. One point about which
SIG is adamant is not to dry-fire the Trailside. According to the Trailside manual, emphasized in at least three
separate places, “Dry firing can DAMAGE your pistol,” and SIG urges that the small red polymer “Dry Fire Plug”
(provided with each gun) always be installed in the Trailside’s chamber whenever the gun is unloaded or stored.

The physical construction of the Trailside is quite different from other conventional .22 rimfire auto designs. Most notably, the barrel and
frame are combined into a single integral piece of investment-cast steel, subsequently machined and milled, drilled, and button-rifled to
Hammerli’s exacting chamber and bore specifications. When SIGARMS describes the Trailside as a “fixed barrel” design, it means fixed
barrel. This unified construction concept contributes much to the Trailside’s reasonable pricing and allows significantly fewer parts than
other designs. The Trailside is made up of only 42 separate parts altogether; by comparison, Hammerli’s similar-appearing previous Model
208 .22 auto requires 135 parts (it’s also much more expensive at approximately $2500).

Simplicity of construction also means simplicity of disassembly/reassembly for routine maintenance. To


disassemble the Trailside you first (after removing the magazine and making sure the chamber is empty) unscrew
and remove the frame extension/barrel weight. Then pull down and hold the front of the trigger guard, draw the
slide back to the full extent of its travel, lift up its rear, and let it glide forward to leave the barrel freely (don’t
boink it against the barrel breechface going by). That’s all there is to it; now clean the exposed mechanisms and
reverse the procedure to reassemble.

On the accessory side SIG offers six different height aftermarket rear sights for the drift-
adjustable Standard Package version of the Trailside. They come in 0.01-inch increments from 0.22 to 0.27 inch,
and they allow precise targeting with virtually any type of .22 LR ammunition available. These sights are compatible
with the drift-adjustable rear sight available on other SIG pistols as well. Each rear sight change will move the
impact of a bullet approximately two inches at 25 yards for each 0.01-inch change in sight height (a higher rear
sight blade will raise the impact of the bullet).

SIG also offers an accessory combination sight pusher tool that makes adjusting and/or changing dovetail drift sights
easier and more precise. According to SIG, moving a rear sight 0.020 inch laterally changes the point of impact
approximately two inches at 25 yards; move the sight in the direction you want the group to move. The same
adjustment distances, incidentally, apply to the click-adjustable Target Package rear sight as well. And in case you’re wondering why a
0.01-inch vertical change moves impact the same amount up or down as a 0.02-inch lateral change moves it left or right, remember that
windage is not affected by gravity.

To my mind most of Hammerli’s obvious care in setting up the manual sight index points and adjustments is made essentially moot by
one of the Trailside’s neatest features: full-length, 3/8-inch standard rimfire-dimension dovetail mounting grooves atop the barrel for
optical sights. This makes it as easy to put a scope or electronic dot sight on the Trailside as on any ordinary .22 rifle and really lets you
take full advantage of the gun’s superb mechanical accuracy.

During a recent SIG product seminar at the company’s Exeter, New Hampshire, facility, I had the opportunity
to fire some early Trailsides set up with electronic dot sights. Shooting offhand at a training silhouette target
set at 25 feet, a magazine full of shots would obliterate the dime-size SIG logo in the target’s corner, leaving a
single ragged opening. Okay, that’s close in, but still one hole offhand. I was understandably anxious to have
the opportunity to do some serious benchrest work at a more demanding distance. And that’s what I was able
to do just a few months later when Shooting Times received two review sample pistols: a six-inch Standard Package and a 4.5-inch Target

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Package. I selected 12 varieties of .22 LR ammunition from six different manufacturers and set up both Trailsides to mount a Burris 10X
adjustable-objective handgun scope for maximum available magnification and elimination of parallax. I chronographed each load through
each gun and fired five five-shot groups of each load with each gun at 25 yards—for 60 individual groups through each pistol, 120 groups
total. The results are listed in the accompanying chart.

“Impressive” is an understatement. I’ve never seen performance that good with any other handgun in the
Trailside’s price category, and there are a lot of so-called premium target pistols on the market at twice the
Trailside’s price that can’t touch it.

SIG’s mission with the Trailside, as stated by Marketing Manager Wes Lang, was to “put a Hammerli into a sport
pistol.” By all conceivable standards the mission is accomplished. Made entirely in Switzerland at the Hammerli
factory, the Trailside is a delightful little gun, slim and sleek in appearance, well balanced in the hand with a
pleasing “all-metal” heft. SIG spokesmen acknowledge that the Trailside’s level of performance is going to invite
comparison with Hammerli’s true competition pistols but nonetheless are firm; they say “it’s a plinker.”

I say it’s a real Hammerli, and I say I want one.

SIG/Hammerli Trailside .22 LR


Performance

Factory load Velocity (fps) Standard 25-Yard


Deviation Accuracy
(fps) (Inches)

Trailside Target Package, 4.5-Inch Barrel, Burris 10X IER-PA

Federal 31-gr.
Hyper Velocity HP 1225 22 0.88

CCI 36-gr.
Mini-Mag HP 1048 11 0.83

PMC 38-gr.
Zapper HP 1113 22 0.75

Remington 38-gr.
High Velocity HP 1050 28 1.00

Winchester 38-gr.
Super-X Solid 1021 16 0.75

CCI 40-gr.
Pistol Match 980 7 0.41

Eley 40-gr.
Pistol Match 879 25 0.63

Eley 40-gr.
Tenex Solid 982 5 0.38

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A Hammerli .22 For Under 400 Dollars 5/5/11 1:24 AM

Federal 40-gr.
Gold Medal Match 923 9 0.69

PMC 40-gr.
ScoreMaster 949 20 0.63

Remington 40-gr.
22 Target 991 17 0.88

Winchester 40-gr.
T22 985 23 0.98

Overall average
accuracy 0.73

Trailside Standard Package, 6.0-Inch Barrel, Burris 10X IER-PA

Federal 31-gr.
Hyper Velocity HP 1321 16 0.81

CCI 36-gr.
Mini-Mag HP 1059 25 0.75

PMC 38-gr.
Zapper HP 1163 15 0.63

Remington 38-gr.
High Velocity HP 1084 26 0.91

Winchester 38-gr.
Super-X Solid 1075 14 0.88

CCI 40-gr.
Pistol Match 1019 6 0.33

Eley 40-gr.
Pistol Match 929 14 0.50

Eley 40-gr.
Tenex Solid 1034 11 0.44

Federal 40-gr.
Gold Medal Match 972 8 0.72

PMC 40-gr.
ScoreMaster 1001 20 0.75

Remington 40-gr.
22 Target 1046 9 0.88

Winchester 40-gr.
T22 1046 25 1.13

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Overall average
accuracy 0.73

NOTES: Accuracy is the average of five five-shot groups fired from a


sandbag benchrest at 25 yards; groups were measured center to center.
Velocity is the average of 10 rounds measured 10 feet from the
guns’ muzzles.

This article was originally published in Shooting Times magazine in June, 2000.

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