"The Korriphila Pistols", currently made in Germany by Intertech, represent the top line of European custom pistols
15.04.2013, 18:40


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Flames on your Long Slide 1911 Pistol ?
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"The Smith & Wesson Model 29" is a six-shot, double-action revolver chambered for the .44 Magnum cartridge and manufactured by the U.S. company Smith & Wesson. It was made famous by and is still most often associated with the fictional character "Dirty" Harry Callahan from the Dirty Harry series of films starring Clint Eastwood. The Model 29 was offered with 3", 4", 5", 6", 6½", 8⅜" and, later, 10⅝" barrel lengths as standard models. Other barrel lengths were available either by special order from Smith & Wesson's Custom Shop or custom built by gunsmiths. The 5" barreled variant had a full length underlug. Finish options available included a highly polished blued or nickel-plated surface. S&W's production of a large N-frame revolver in .44 Magnum began in 1955; the Model 29 designation was applied in 1957. It remained primarily the province of handgun enthusiasts, some law enforcement personnel and hunters until 1971, when Clint Eastwood made it famous as "the most powerful handgun in the world" in the movie Dirty Harry. After the movie's release, retailers had trouble keeping the Model 29 in stock. At the time of its introduction, the Model 29 was the most powerful production handgun. There were a number of custom, or wildcat, calibers that were more powerful, as in the old Howdah pistols of the 19th century. Elmer Keith's achievements in maximizing the power and performance of the .44 Special was the inspiration and driving force behind the introduction of the .44 Magnum by Smith & Wesson. His intention for the new round was to be used in sidearms for hunters of large, dangerous game, rather than for self defense, though with today's specialty cartridges, it can be a good defensive round. The Model 29 will chamber and fire .44 Special cartridges, as the .44 Magnum was developed from the .44 Special. The Magnum case is slightly longer to prevent magnum rounds from being chambered and fired in handguns chambered for the .44 Special. In the late 1990s, Smith and Wesson discontinued production of many models of revolvers, including the 'basic' Model 29; since then, at various times, the model, in limited or 'custom' configurations, has been manufactured in as many as 10 evolutions. The original Model 29 was superseded by the Model 29-1 in 1960, with modifications made to the ejector rod screw. The Model 29-2 replaced it the following year, with one screw that had secured the cylinder stop spring dropped. The barrel length was shortened from 6 1/2" to 6" in 1979. These two versions are known as "pinned and recessed". "Pinned" means that the barrels are screwed in, and additionally secured by a pin driven through the frame and a notch in the barrel. "Recessed" means that the cylinder holes are recessed so that when loaded, the rim of the cartridges are fully enclosed by the cylinder. In 1982, the cost-cutting Model 29-3 dropped recessed cylinders and pinned barrels for crush-fit barrels.
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"MD 50 Sniper Rifle" (formerly known as Leader 50) is designed by Charles St George, prominent small arms designer who previously developed semi-automatic rifles such as Leader T2 and Bushmaster M17S. MD 50 (Leader 50) is manufactured by US-based company Micor Defense. Leader 50 sniper rifle is one of the lightest and most compact fifty caliber rifles on the market, and, if required, can be more or less comfortably fired from the shoulder. MD 50 sniper rifle is gas operated, semi-automatic weapon of bullpup layout. Its receiver is made of extruded aluminum alloy. Gas system of the MD rifle features three-position gas regulator and annular short stroke gas piston, located around the barrel. The bolt group is of original and innovative design. Rotary bolt has triangular head with three frontal locking lugs – an idea, pioneered by St George in his Leader T2 rifle three decades ago. The bolt carrier is unusually short and light, which leads to a relatively short receiver and decreased felt recoil. To further decrease the recoil, barrel is equipped with effective muzzle brake. Rifle is fed from detachable box magazines with 10-round capacity, ejection is to the right. Sighting means are provided via long integral Picatinny rail above the receiver, which could host variety of sights – daytime telescopic, night vision / IR and / or back-up iron sights. Accessories such as bipod or grip-pod can be installed on the additional rail located below the front end. http://www.facebook.com/GunsAmmoBlades
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"The FN Model 1910" was a departure for Browning. Before, his designs were produced by both FN in Europe and Colt Firearms in the United States. Since Colt did not want to produce it, Browning chose to patent and produce this design in Europe only. Introduced in 1910, this pistol used a novel operating spring location surrounding the barrel. This location became the standard in such future weapons as the Walther PPK and Russian Makarov. It incorporated the standard Browning striker-firing mechanism and a grip safety along with a magazine safety and an external safety lever (known as the "triple safety") in a compact package. Offered in both .380 ACP (6-round magazine) and .32 ACP (7-round magazine) calibers, it remained in production until 1983. It is possible to switch calibers by changing only the barrel. However, FN never offered packages containing a single pistol with both caliber barrels. An FN M1910, serial number 19074, chambered in .32 ACP(the others were 19075, 19120 and 19126 purchased for the Black Hand members) was the handgun used by Gavrilo Princip to assassinate Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, precipitating the First World War.
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This DDM4 from Daniel Defense is a prototype. Available in March 2013, this is a short-barreled offering with a 10.3-inch tube shrouded by the company’s new nine-inch rail. And what makes this rifle a complete trendsetter can be largely credited to the fact it arrived chambered in .300 Blackout wearing an AAC suppressor-ready flash hider. After a long year of disappoints, I can finally say that we’ve found a subsonic-shooting platform in this caliber that you can actually depend on. Why Does the .300 BLK Matter?
The .300 Blackout (.300 BLK) we know today was initially developed by Advanced Armament Corp. (AAC) for use by U.S. Special Operations needing .30-caliber performance from a short-barreled rifle (SBR) in suppressed applications. In many documented cases overseas, the 5.56 just wasn’t getting it done. Though everyone in the Spec Ops community seems to know that bearded fellows in Multicam and Merrells are evaluating the Blackout (the real reason it’s still tough to find ammunition), no one will go on record to talk about it. (They probably learned some lessons in the last 10 years when these guys originally tried to adopt the 6.8 SPC and told everyone.) So, mum’s the word. I now leave it to the commercial firearm industry to speculate what the clandestine side of the U.S. military wants with .300 BLK. All I can say is that to appreciate the Blackout and what the cartridge will do, you have to understand what it won’t do. The .300 BLK isn’t the perfect cartridge. It requires a number of important considerations. I’ve shot more .300 BLK than most in my line of work from virtually every ammunition brand out there. It’s dirty. In my experience it usually requires twice the amount of effort to clean a rifle as one chambered in 5.56 to the same degree of cleanliness. And it’s finicky. Although every manufacturer claims that you can use this cartridge with any 5.56 magazine, I’ve found this simply isn’t true. Different makes of rifles seem to prefer different types of magazines (if they reliably feed at all). Most important, rifles with carbine-length gas systems often choke as they try to feed the heavyweight subsonic loads if they aren’t suppressed. And don’t even get me started on bullet-drop differences you’ll need to chart past 100 yards if you intend to shoot a combination of various loads. The advantages that Special Operations and even hunters are interested in start with the lack of logistical issues in obtaining such a substantial increase in muzzle energy over a 5.56. Don’t get me wrong, I love what the 6.5 Grendel and the 6.8 SPC offer, but you don’t need to hog out the bolt face to shoot .300 BLK. It uses the same bolt because the cartridge rim is the same as the 5.56. (While working as an armorer for Blackwater, I saw a number of high-round-count 6.8 carbines snap a bolt lug.) And if you hoard magazines, you’ll appreciate the fact that .300 will run in most 5.56 magazines without special followers (as needed for the 6.5 and 6.8). http://www.facebook.com/GunsAmmoBlades
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"The Korriphila Pistols", currently made in Germany by Intertech, represent the top line of European custom pistols. Basic design was a brainchild of the Edgar Budischowsky, who patented its delayed blowback action in 1979. The action is somewhat similar to older Vorgrimler roller-delayed system, developed during WW2 and later used in a number of firearms from Heckler und Koch, such as P9S pistol or MP5 submachine gun. Korriphila pistols are made on custom basis, and it is said that only few dozens of new pistols are produced each year. Made with very tight tolerances and luxurious finish, these pistols command prices in the US $ 4 000 region, and a special-order Odin's Eye versions, which had frames and slides milled from the solid blocks of Damascus steel, cost at least three times more. While these pistols can be used for personal self-defense, they certainly have more value as collectables and investment pieces. Korriphila pistols are delayed blowback firearms that use a single roller, interposed between a separate breechblock and a slide. When slide is in battery, roller extends below into the cut in the frame. Upon recoil, breechblock forces the roller back and out of its recess, which causes the slide to open faster than the breechblock. This system is basically a half of the more common Vorgrimler system, turned 90 degrees. Trigger is of double action type. Magazines are single stack.
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