Archive for the 'Handgun' category

The BUL M-5 is an M1911A1-style automatic manufactured by BUL firearms in Isreal. It is available in a variety of calibers and can be switched between them by swapping barrels, springs, magazines and possibly the slide (to 9×19mm Para, 9×21mm IMI, .38Super, .40SW, and of course .45ACP) . The M-5s have become quite popular in the competitive shooting circuits.
Categories: Accessories, Handgun
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The Gasser Army revolver was an open-framed heavy-bore revolver from the late 19th Century that was adopted as the Austro-Hungarian Cavalry revolver as the Gasser M1870. It holds five rounds of 11.2mm centrefire, a long heavy round known as the 11mm Montenegrin that was used in the earlier Fruwirth carbines.
Categories: Antique, Handgun
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When Bond’s Beretta 418 caught in his holster on one mission, it was decided that he should switch guns to the Walther PPK chambered in 7.65mm Browning (.32 ACP). The PPK was introduced in the 20’s in Germany and was the smaller version of the Walther PP line of automatics, aimed at undercover police work. It’s a fairly standard blow-back operated double-action semi-automatic with a single-stacked magazine. It holds seven rounds in the magazine. It is also available in .380 ACP with a six-round magazine.
Categories: Handgun, Walther
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Okay, so those of you who read this regularly are looking at this and going “cripes, he’s posting another Walther P-something…” And you are right. The PPS (Police Pistol, Slim) is Walther’s new 9mm entry, and is one of the slimmest 9mms in the world. It’s being marketed to police and security forces in Europe, but in the US you can excet that this will instead see a lot of concealed carry. It comes factory-standard with a six-shot single-stack magazine and a seven-shot magazine with an extended base plate (shown in the photo above). The gun is only a little bigger than the classic Walther PPK and certainly looks pretty.
Categories: Handgun, Walther
5 Comments »

Remington Rand didn’t just make razors. The company is actually most famous for making the original UNIVAC 1 computer, but during World War II, Remington Rand produced more licensed M1911A1s than any other wartime manufacturer. The gun itself in this photo is a classic M1911A1 - but the photo is awesome; true gunporn.
Categories: Handgun
3 Comments »

This odd and unreliable weapon was manufactured in Rhodesia during the Rhodesian Revolution, and then continued to be manufactured by Kommando Arms Company. Designed for semi-automatic fire only, it is too big to be a comfortable handgun, but lacks the ability to fire in full automatic as would be expected for a submachine gun or machine pistol (however, reportedly the gun was so unreliable that it would occasionally fire bursts instead of single shots - when it wasn’t jamming). The LDP is a blowback operated 9mm based on the design of the Vz-25, the same source weapon as the famous Israeli UZI design. Versions of this weapon were made for military use, and had select-fire functionality and were known as RUZIs (Rhodesian UZIs).
Categories: Handgun, Machine Pistol
1 Comment »

Looking like a gun out of anime, the Dan Wesson PPC is a unique-looking and very heavy weight .357 revolver. This shot really shows off the heavy weight of the barrel weight and assembly. Gorgeous.
Here’s the same gun in full profile.

Categories: Handgun
17 Comments »

This is a very interesting early automatic pistol. The M12 (Steyr-Hahn Model 1912) automatic was adopted by the Austro-Hungarian army in 1912 and has an 8-round internal magazine that is reloaded by stripper-clip instead of the now-standard removable magazines. It is chambered in a proprietary 9mm round, the 9 x 23 mm Steyr. Many of these automatics were raided from armories by German forces in World War II and converted to fire 9mm Parabellum.
Categories: Antique, Handgun
7 Comments »

Calling this a “Pistol” is a bit of a stretch. Vector Arms builds this semi-automatic version of the “HK 51″ (which in turn is a gunsmith-modified version of the G3 to the scale of the MP5 or HK53). Firing .308 Winchester (7.62 x 51 mm NATO), this is a potent little package that looks and feels like an authentic Heckler & Koch. With a 9 inch barrel, it is slightly longer than the tradition HK 51 conversions (and four inches longer than the HK51K). The Vector V51 model shown here has a 20-round magazine - typical of the G3 source firearm.
Categories: Carbine, Handgun
1 Comment »

The SIG P-210 was originally designed in 1949 for the Swiss Army. It has become known as one of the most accurate production handguns in the world. It is a very reliable and stable heavy-framed 9mm automatic pistol with a single-stacked 8-round magazine instead of the double-stacked magazines that are standard in most modern 9mm’s. A very clean looking gun, the P-210 is something of a rarity, and is quite expensive.
Categories: Handgun
4 Comments »
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