I had one, made in 1967, traded it quite a while back. Used it as my secondary weapon on my first cop job(back in the stone age!) It worked good in both calibers. I only shot it in.32 once or twice, but I put a bunch of.380 thru it. If your has no value as a collector.all you have to do in most cases is polish the ramp and it'll feed hollows like a champ.
I normally use a drum on a dremel.start with 360 grit and end with 500. Finish it off with a little burnishing drum and simichrome polish and it'll look like a mirror.
The first 99,999 model 1922s produced had a simple 5 digit serial number accordingly. As they hit number 100,000 however, they restarted the serial numbering system again, adding an 'A' suffix, and did so again with 'B' after pistol 99999a, etc. So, based on this info, my particular pistol was the 113,523rd one produced. Browning serial number age 1910, fn 1905 manufacture date, fn 1910 date of manufacture, fn 1910 serial numbers, fn 1922 manufacture dates.