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Talk:The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift: Difference between revisions
Crazycrankle (talk | contribs) |
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Beretta 92FS' are typically used in place of the more accurate M9/M9A1. --[[User:Crazycrankle|Crazycrankle]] 00:40, 13 January 2010 (UTC) | Beretta 92FS' are typically used in place of the more accurate M9/M9A1. --[[User:Crazycrankle|Crazycrankle]] 00:40, 13 January 2010 (UTC) | ||
:''shouldnt it be a beretta M9/A1'' | |||
:This is a '''movie''', not real life. In reality, movie armorers always use the civilian 92F/FS in place of the military M9. There are almost no M9s in private hands in the U.S., and since the 92F and M9 are almost identical besides the markings, they figure the average moviegoer won't notice or care, anyway. You've never seen a genuine military-issue M9 in a movie; they're always 92Fs. -[[User:MT2008|MT2008]] |
Revision as of 00:44, 13 January 2010
[moved from main page]
- The gun he uses is not a P226, or any kind of SIG-Sauer. It's a S&W of some kind, I think a 915 or 5904. -MT2008
- I was the original author and first identified the weapon as a 6904 and was constantly berated that it was actually a SIG-Sauer untill someone finally changed it -Anonymous
I thought I'd put a few minutes into this. While it looks very much like the 6904, the trigger guard looks more like the one belonging to it's predecessor, the 469. So I took the liberty of labeling it as such. I also added screen caps, and modified some text. --Crazycrankle 08:32, 21 December 2009 (UTC)
Father's Gun
I don't know what the regulations are concerning American Military Personnel in Japan but it seems unlikely that the Japanese government would allow American soldiers to take their guns home if they lived off base like Sean's Father. -Anonymous
- if this is a service pistol shouldnt it be a beretta M9/A1 smish34
Beretta 92FS' are typically used in place of the more accurate M9/M9A1. --Crazycrankle 00:40, 13 January 2010 (UTC)
- shouldnt it be a beretta M9/A1
- This is a movie, not real life. In reality, movie armorers always use the civilian 92F/FS in place of the military M9. There are almost no M9s in private hands in the U.S., and since the 92F and M9 are almost identical besides the markings, they figure the average moviegoer won't notice or care, anyway. You've never seen a genuine military-issue M9 in a movie; they're always 92Fs. -MT2008