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Posted: 2/21/2021 10:08:19 AM EDT
Most notably the PT92,PT99 and the PT917c pistols. Started looking into them and they seem pretty impressive for the cost. Are they accurate? Had a chance to get a 10yr old original owner,mint condition PT917c  for $450.00,I passed,what do you guys think..good deal?
Link Posted: 2/21/2021 7:27:10 PM EDT
[#1]
Link Posted: 3/11/2021 5:49:25 PM EDT
[Last Edit: Gopher] [#2]
The 900 series guns were for the most part good to go. I have a first-generation PT99 that has been solid. I had a PT945 for awhile but traded it plus some boot for a Glock 30. It is a Sig P220 size gun. It was accurate and reliable but it hammer bit the hell out of me. My current truck gun is a $200 PT908 someone rattle canned. Like all of the metal frame guns, they are DA/SA and can be carried cocked and locked. For the most part, they are better than their reputation.
pt909 5 by jhnstn1, on Flickr" />
Link Posted: 4/12/2021 11:33:51 PM EDT
[Last Edit: gnappi] [#3]
I've had Beretta clone PT series forever as well as genuine Beretta's including the 92X performance. There are a few differences that make them a bit of a pain mainly mag / grip incompatibility and the pinned mag release.

Other than that, the main differences between them and Beretta are:

The finish on the SS Taurus PT is absolutely the best I've seen and Beretta isn't even a distant second.

The ability to carry hammer back safety on or DA first shot is a better choice for those that like the flexibility for more than one carry mode.

If Taurus made a PT-100/101 (.40) with a stainless frame, I'd buy two :-)


Link Posted: 8/15/2021 4:38:43 PM EDT
[#4]
I've got 2 pt92s. Love them. You can modify Beretta mags to fit. There is interesting history behind this gun. Both of mine are pre-lock, so I don't know when they were made. I've heard new ones may not be as good. I don't know. I was just looking at them on taurus's site. Kinda wish they still made non railed models so they'd fit my holsters.
It's really a smooth shooting gun. If you're okay with a DA/SA gun they're great. It's probably been 15 years since it's been in my carry rotation, I pretty much carry 1911s and Glocks nowadays. The PT92 is actually still kept by my bed though.
Link Posted: 8/21/2021 11:57:11 AM EDT
[#5]
Link Posted: 10/24/2021 3:45:55 PM EDT
[#6]
I have a PT99AF with Olight baldr laser/light that is my bedroom gun. I shoots accurately, every shot! I modded a couple Mec Gar 18rd Beretta mags to go with the Taurus mags. Frame mounted decockers/ safeties  allowing cocked and locked are how Beretta should have made them !
Are they still being produced?
Link Posted: 1/9/2022 3:40:50 PM EDT
[#7]
Bought my Pt99 back in 1989 new. No way I'd ever let it go. Shoots perfect. Handles and looks awesome. These are the guns that made Taurus famous. I had a chance to buy a stainless one . Wish I had gotten it.
Link Posted: 1/11/2022 5:40:47 PM EDT
[#8]
My dad bought me a PT92 as my first "big" handgun in 93 or so for Christmas... I LOVE that gun.  I have to read up on how to mod Beretta mags and whether they are then interchangeable or not, that would be a reason for me to buy a ton of surplus.

I need to get mine serviced though, it no longer strikes with a double action trigger pull, it is like the hammer rebounds once released instead of firing.  Works fine single action though.
Link Posted: 1/11/2022 5:52:19 PM EDT
[#9]
I had an early 90s PT92AF that I loved. Only got rid of it because I got a screaming deal on a commercial M9.
Link Posted: 1/13/2022 4:33:06 PM EDT
[#10]
Taurus got those right.  Known several people that have had them.

As I recall Taurus mags work in Berettas but Beretta mags don't work in the Taurus.
Link Posted: 1/13/2022 4:37:12 PM EDT
[#11]
I have a PT92 from the early 90's and its fantastic pistol. Honestly , it's one of the only Taurus pistols I would recommend out of their lineup.

Link Posted: 1/13/2022 5:10:03 PM EDT
[#12]
I had a PT 24/7 Pro in 9mm and didn't care for it. It felt great in my hand but the trigger pull was pretty high and I despised the Heinie 8 sights. I wound up giving it to my son.
Link Posted: 11/14/2022 5:53:11 AM EDT
[#13]
I had and sold the older bright stainless one , never a problem , said if I ever see one like it I would buy it , and looked every time I was at a shop , walked in not long ago and did see a real nice on with wood fact grips 399 I jumped on it took it home glad I did , I think its from the around 1988 or 90 maybe .
Link Posted: 11/14/2022 7:20:06 AM EDT
[#14]
The Beretta design based Taurus guns were pretty good. The metal frame Taurus guns are better than the polymer ones.
Link Posted: 11/22/2022 9:41:34 PM EDT
[#15]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By gunnut284:
The Beretta design based Taurus guns were pretty good. The metal frame Taurus guns are better than the polymer ones.
View Quote


Somewhere around 85/86 or so the PT92/99 were changed up a bit and added the de-cocker to them. Some say the older guns, made on the old Beretta machinery had better triggers.
Link Posted: 11/23/2022 8:23:39 AM EDT
[Last Edit: Y-T71] [#16]
I bought a friends PT-92 (pre-decocker), made in '86 IIRC along with his Dillon SD in '87 for $250 (for both)

I bought it, not for the gun but, for the press to feed my 629 .44mag but learned to load 9mm.

That gun shot every round, good or bad, that I made while learning how to reload; rounds numbering, eventually, In the 10's of thousands.

A friend and I would take our pistols, ammo cans full of ammo and a steel shooting/dueling tree to and abandoned strip mine and blast can after can of ammo every weekend for a few years and that pistol never malfunctioned, ever, not once.

I foolishly traded it on a whim for a Walther P-1 that I don't even have anymore and that trade was the only one I've ever truly regretted.
Link Posted: 12/22/2022 2:26:56 PM EDT
[#17]
Hardly used ones are often very attractively priced when they pop up.

They is a period when they are new enough to have the safety also function as a decocker,
But old enough there is no internal lock.

This is the window I prefer.

You can modify the mag catch to used Beretta 92 mags, but the Taurus mags are readily available at great prices.

Taurus is kind of a pain about selling parts.  But you can usually find some magazine catches for sale online if you want to keep both on hand.
Link Posted: 12/22/2022 3:31:31 PM EDT
[#18]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By ramairthree:
Hardly used ones are often very attractively priced when they pop up.

They is a period when they are new enough to have the safety also function as a decocker,
But old enough there is no internal lock.

This is the window I prefer.

You can modify the mag catch to used Beretta 92 mags, but the Taurus mags are readily available at great prices.

Taurus is kind of a pain about selling parts.  But you can usually find some magazine catches for sale online if you want to keep both on hand.
View Quote
@ramairthree

Mine was made in 1994 before the Clinton AWB. It is a decocker model.

https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/the-taurus-pt-92af-is-not-obscure-but-i-sure-desired-it-anyway/


Link Posted: 2/18/2023 7:21:15 AM EDT
[#19]
Like I posted had one many yrs ago , sold it always looking for another like it kind off a bright stainless fixed sight real nice brazilian walnut checkered grips I found another jumped on it for 400 bucks and 2 mags . it`s been flawless got a few more fact mags and had Beretta holster so good to go .
Link Posted: 2/18/2023 7:51:34 AM EDT
[#20]
Link Posted: 2/18/2023 11:11:58 AM EDT
[#21]
I have gotten great service out of my early 90's PT 92 with the aluminum frame and decocker/safety. It the pistol I carry out in the forrest for it's high capacity for potential Methbilly encounters.
Link Posted: 2/22/2023 5:51:05 PM EDT
[#22]
Attachment Attached File

1993 year of manufacture.
More accurate than I am, smooth as silk, and dead nuts reliable. Probably the “cheapest” pistol I own and even forgoing the sentimental value attached to it, it would be one of the last in my stable to go. Just a well built pistol!
Link Posted: 4/29/2023 9:26:31 PM EDT
[#23]
$450 sounds high but otherwise a solid full sized pistol
Link Posted: 4/30/2023 10:23:19 AM EDT
[#24]
Discussion ForumsJump to Quoted PostQuote History
Originally Posted By NesralG:
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/577174/73A71FE1-F692-46B7-940A-E83B28A7B25E_jpe-2721015.JPG
1993 year of manufacture.
More accurate than I am, smooth as silk, and dead nuts reliable. Probably the “cheapest” pistol I own and even forgoing the sentimental value attached to it, it would be one of the last in my stable to go. Just a well built pistol!
View Quote

The older ones are much nicer, like yours
Link Posted: 5/19/2023 10:11:12 PM EDT
[#25]
I inherited a PT-92 from my dad. I’ll be dead before that gun leaves my possession. Besides the nostalgia it is an excellent and accurate gun.
Link Posted: 10/20/2023 12:49:20 PM EDT
[Last Edit: Miami_JBT] [#26]
Picked up another one recently.



April 1991 made Satin Nickel PT92AF.





Some of my Berettas with my Tauruses. Much more fun for me than modern polymer stuff. My .40 S&W Berettas too.

Attachment Attached File


Attachment Attached File
Link Posted: 10/23/2023 10:05:33 PM EDT
[#27]
I got mine in '90 /'91, PT99 AFD.

Sold it 2 years ago, never an issue. Great pistol. I bought a PT92 in '93, it never shot as good for me for some reason.
Link Posted: 10/27/2023 8:30:04 PM EDT
[#28]
If OP is still looking he will be happy to know they are bringing back the PT917-c from an e-mail today. Price will be around $600 though.

An Icon Returns: The Taurus 917C
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