BERSA Thunder 380
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Thunder 380 | |
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Bersa Thunder 380 with satin nickel finish |
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Type | Handgun |
Place of origin | Argentina |
Service history | |
Used by | Ecuadorian Air Force |
Production history | |
Designed | 1995 |
Produced | 1995 to Present |
Variants | CC (Concealed Carry) |
Specifications | |
Weight | (unloaded): 20 oz. (560 g) |
Length | 6.61" (168 mm) |
Barrel length | 3.54" (90 mm) |
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Cartridge | .380 ACP |
Caliber | .380 |
Action | Blowback-operated, semi-automatic |
Muzzle velocity | 1050 ft/s (Cor-Bon JHP) |
Feed system | 7, 9, or 10 round single-stack magazine |
Introduced in the late 1990's by Argentinian firearms manufacturer BERSA, S.A., the Thunder 380 is a small semi-automatic pistol that has enjoyed popularity due to its reputation for reliability, light weight and concealability, accuracy at short to medium range, and relatively low price.
Contents |
[edit] History
Preceded by the BERSA Modelo 383 SA, Modelo 383 DA, Modelo 83 and Series 95, the Thunder 380 is part of the BERSA product lineup that also involves the Thunder 22, Thunder 22-6, Thunder 32, Thunder 380 Super, Thunder 9, Mini Thunder 9, Mini Thunder 40, and Mini Thunder 45. A variant of sorts is sold by another manufacturer, Firestorm SGS of New Jersey, wherein the pistol is assembled from parts manufactured by BERSA and marketed as the 'Firestorm 380'. A further-lightened variant of the Thunder 380 called the 'Concealed Carry' model was slated for a 2005 release by BERSA in the United States.
[edit] Intended Market
The popular Thunder 380 is intended for general civilian use. This conceptualization might be appreciated in the context of handgun use and law in many South American countries, where the Thunder 380 is quite popular, and .380 ACP is frequently the most powerful cartridge allowed to civilians. Nevertheless, a number of military and law enforcement forces have included BERSA 380's in their tables of equipment, including the Ecuadorian Air Force. The Thunder 380 bears a loose resemblance to the Walther PPK, but is sold for a fraction of the price.
[edit] Design Advantages
The Thunder 380 has a light aluminium alloy frame that reduces weight for easier carry, and yet the pistol still retains enough mass to help tame recoil. The blowback, fixed-barrel design theoretically aids accuracy, and it seems the vast majority of Thunder 380 users report favorably on that matter. The nearly straight-in alignment of the chamber and the topmost cartridge in the loaded magazine seems to be responsible for the pistol's reliable chambering and cycling during use. The frame features a long rearward tang over the grips, effectively protecting one's thumb-webbing from hammer-bite or slide-bite. There is an abundance of safety features built into the Thunder 380: a slide mounted manual safety -and- decocker that blocks the hammer, a magazine disconnect safety that prevents firing if a magazine is not inserted, a long double-action (DA) first trigger pull, inertial firing pin, and some models have an integral key-operated trigger lock. Some productions also feature an automatic firing pin block.
[edit] Limitations
The Thunder 380 protects the hand from being 'bitten' by the movements of the hammer or the slide, but has a slide-mounted manual safety lever, which when switched to 'safe' points downwards past the slide's outline: if the user has very large hands and grips the pistol carelessly while manually cycling the slide (with the safety lever on 'safe'), the lever can slightly nick the hand. Separately, the cost of additional factory magazines is much higher than one might expect, but some third party manufacturers, such as Pro Mag Industries, have marketed alternatives (although of somewhat dubious reliability). There is, of course, this certain perception among many pistol users (particularly in the United States, the Philippines, and elsewhere) that a .380 ACP cartridge is not powerful enough to provide dependable and timely neutralization of an assailant.