11/6/2022 0 Comments Walther p1 magazines![]() It was introduced in 1988 and had a lighter alloy frame with the P5 Compact weighing 750g (1.65lbs) rather than 795g (1.75lbs). In addition to the P5, Walther also developed a compact model for plain clothes use which had a slightly shorter barrel (3.1 inches), slide and a truncated hammer. Diagram showing the P5’s parts and internal layout (Walther) The pistol has an alloy frame, with full-length slide rails and an enlarged trigger guard for use with gloves. The P5 has a stronger and more durable fully enclosed slide which is contoured to aid holstering. Like the P38 the pistol ejects to the left rather than the right. The P5 has a 3.5 inch (9cm) barrel and fed from an 8-round, single stack, magazine with a heel release. The firing pin only moves into alignment with the hammer surface when the trigger is pulled. There is a small recess in the pistol’s hammer for the firing pin. This was safely achieved by some upgrades to the P5’s hammer and firing pin. Instead, the pistol could be carried in condition two – with a round in the chamber and the hammer down. WALTHER P1 MAGAZINES MANUALI would say that the P5’s decocker is easier to operate, with a shorter length of travel, than the SIG P6’s.įollowing the West German police specification Walther designed the pistol to be safely and rapidly brought into action, and as a result dispensed the manual safety. ![]() Walther moved the P5’s decocker from the slide to the frame and this also served as the slide stop and slide release. This means that the barrel and slide recoil together for a short distance before the locking block falls and allows the slide to continue moving rearward, ejecting a spent case and chambering a new round. It uses the same short-recoil operated system and locking mech as the P38. ![]() The P5 is a locked-breech pistol and has double-action/single-action (DA/SA) trigger. Walther’s response, the P5, was introduced in 1978. Only around 2,600 P38Ks were produced.įollowing the attack on the 1972 Munich Olympics games West German police began the search for a new service police. The P38K retained the same slide and frame as the original P38s, but had the front sight mounted on the front strap of the frame and none of the pistol’s contours were rounded to aid drawing and returning to a holster. While a shortened P38k had been produced in the early 1970s, this was only an as an interim solution. WALTHER P1 MAGAZINES FULLThe P5′s design evolved from the P38, combining the lock work and dual recoil springs of the P38 (re-designated the P1 in 1963) with a shortened barrel and a full length slide. ![]() Walther’s design competed against pistols from Mauser, Heckler & Koch and SIG Sauer. It was developed to fit the new police specification for a small, handy pistol which could be brought into action quickly. The Walther P5 was developed in the mid-1970s as an response to the West German police’s continued search for a 9x19mm service pistol to replace the older smaller calibre pistols then in service, like the Walther PP. ![]()
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