A factory development example of the Walther P88 chambered in 9mm, accompanied by three experimental barrels from the platform's refinement process. Carries the early Carl Walther Waffenfabrik Ulm/Do. slide address.
Most P88 collectors will go their whole lives without handling a true factory prototype. This is one. The slide carries the older Carl Walther Waffenfabrik Ulm/Do. address and the Cal. 9mm marking rather than the cleaner commercial roll mark, which puts it squarely in the developmental window before the gun reached its finished production form. And the giveaway sits right in front of you on the bench: three loose 9mm barrels, each cut and finished a little differently, all tied to the work of dialing in the locked-breech system that would define the pistol.
The layout is pure late-Cold War Walther. You get the full-size aluminum frame with its hand-filling grip, the ambidextrous controls, and the wedge-locking system that replaced the older P38 dropping block. The slide wears a traditional blued finish with a bright machined flat along the lower edge, and the polished steel barrels stand in sharp contrast to it. Markings are crisp. The banner Walther logo and the Ulm address read clean under the light.
Condition tells the story of a working tool, not a safe queen. There is honest handling wear on the high edges of the slide, light idle scratches across the flats, and the kind of tool marks you expect on parts that got swapped and tested. The bore on the fitted barrel is bright. The black grip panels show their age but remain solid, and the controls still function with the crisp feel Walther built into them.
The pistol comes in its wood-grained Walther box with the three experimental barrels. That trio is the whole reason this gun matters. Production P88 pistols turn up now and then. One that came off the bench mid-development, with the spare barrels that prove it, is a different animal entirely. For the Walther student, this is a rare look inside how the company finished one of its most ambitious service designs.
Our team is available to answer questions about specifications, provenance, availability, and FFL transfer logistics. We typically respond within one business day.
We typically respond within one business day.