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and is in mint condition.įounded by two brothers– Julian and Bonifacio Echeverria– in 1905, Star is perhaps the best-known of the three big Spanish handgun makers.
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This version was imported long ago by Garcia in Washington D.C. Starĭubbed a Starlite by importers, this Star 9mm was a more compact BKS style version of their 1911-style handguns.
#SPANISH STAR PISTOL MAGAZINES SERIES#
The contract was so large that the company had to subcontract with as many as 50 other small cottage gunmakers in the Eibar area to fill the demand.Īfter WWI, Gabilondo y Urresti changed the company name to Llama and updated their catalog with several updates to the Colt M1911 design, which remained in production as the Llama Max series into the 2000s, as well as revolvers such as the Comanche and Martial series, which were cloned S&Ws in many respects. 32ACP handgun won a large contract with the French Army, then embroiled in World War I. Specializing in clones of FN pistols and various S&W revolvers, they catapulted into fame, of a sort, with their Ruby pistol in 1914. The oldest of the three by a year, Llama-Gabilondo y Cia SA, best known as Llama, dated back to 1904 when the company ran under the banner of its two principal gunsmiths, Gabilondo y Urresti. This example in the Vault is in excellent condition.