Walther PPK

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Walther PP / PPK

Walther PPK
Type semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin Germany
Service history
In service 1929 (PP),
1931 (PPK)
1968 (PPK/S)
Wars World War II
Production history
Manufacturer Walther
Specifications
Weight 682 g (PP)
568 g (PPK)
Length 174mm (PP)
154 mm (PPK)
Barrel length 99 mm (PP)
84 mm (PPK)

Cartridge .32 ACP, .380 ACP

.22LR, .25 ACP (6.35 mm)

Action blowback, Double action
Feed system Magazine capacity:
PP: 8+1 (.32 acp) or 7+1 (.380)
PPK: 7+1 (.32 acp) or 6+1 (.380)
Sights fixed iron sight

The Walther PP series pistols include the Walther PP, PPK, and PPK/S. They are blowback-operated semiautomatic pistols manufactured by Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen in Germany or under license from Walther in France and the United States [1]. These pistols features an exposed hammer, a double-action trigger mechanism, a single-column magazine, and a fixed barrel which also acts as the guide rod for the gun's single recoil spring.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The most famous gun of the series is the Walther PPK which stands for Polizeipistole Kurz ( 'Police Pistol Short') or Kriminal ('Detective Pistol' in German). It is a smaller version of the PP (Polizeipistole) and has a shorter grip and barrel as well as a lower magazine capacity.

The PP was released in 1929 and the PPK followed in 1931. Both pistols were popular with European police and civilian shooters. The pistols were reliable and easy to conceal. During World War II both variants of the pistol were issued to German military police, Luftwaffe, and other support personnel and Adolf Hitler used his PPK to kill himself at the end of the war in Europe.

The PP and PPK were some of the world's first successful double action semiautomatic pistols and not only were they widely copied, but they are still produced by Walther. The Walther design has inspired several other pistols including, but not limited to, the Soviet Makarov and the Czechoslovakian CZ50. Although it was an excellent automatic pistol, the Walther had competition in its time. The Mauser HSC pistol and the Sauer 38H pistol (a.k.a. model "H"), were both successful in their own right. Sauer pistol production ceased at war's end, but the refined SIG P230, and later the P232, owe much to the earlier Walther weapon.

[edit] PPK versus PPK/S

When the the U.S. Congress passed the Gun Control Act of 1968, the PPK, which had been selling well among plain-clothes police officers in the U.S., was suddenly too small (by just a few millimeters of overall height) for legal importation into the U.S. (Hogg 1979:164). (The U.S. was the largest market for this type of firearm.) Two solutions emerged for this problem:

  1. First, Walther created the PPK/S model, which combined the PP's frame with the PPK's barrel and slide, creating a pistol that, at 104.14 mm high, was legal for importation into the U.S. (Hogg 1979:164; Josserand & Stevenson 1972:301[photo]).
  2. Later, the PPK was license-manufactured in the U.S. by Ranger Manufacturing in Gadsen, Alabama in 1978 and was sold by Interarms, in Alexandria, Virginia. An improved version is now manufactured by Smith and Wesson that includes a longer grip tang to offer the shooter more protection from slide bite (rearward movement of the slide striking hand during firing cycle) that was often an issue with the PPK model.

The PPK/S differs from the PPK in:

  • the aforementioned slight difference in overall height
  • weight—the PPK/S weighs 1.8 oz more

The PPK/S is available in either 32 ACP with an 8+1 magazine capacity or 380 ACP with a 7+1 magazine capacity. The PPK is currently available only in 380 ACP and has a 6+1 capacity.

[edit] Cultural Influence

The PPK is the trademark weapon of fictional secret agent James Bond in books and films.[2] The weapon is prominently featured in opening sequences as well as movie art. The pistol itself enjoys popularity as a result. Bond stopped carrying the PPK in Tomorrow Never Dies, where he replaced it with the newer Walther P99.

[edit] References

Hogg, Ian V. (1979). Guns and How They Work. New York: Everest House. ISBN 0896960234.

Josserand, M.H., Stevenson, J.A. (1972). Pistols, Revolvers, and Ammunition. New York: Bonanza Books (A division of Crown Publishers, Inc.). ISBN 0517165163.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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.38 Calibre
Cartridges
.38 Long Colt (1875) | .38 S&W (1877) | .38 ACP (1900) | .38 Special (1902) | .380 ACP (1908) | .38/200 (1922) | .38 Super (1927)
Revolvers
M1899 Revolver | Smith & Wesson M&P/Victory | Enfield No. 2 Mk I | Colt Detective's Special
Pistols
Colt M1900 | Colt M1902 | Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer | Colt M1908 Pocket Hammerless | Browning M1910 | Walther PPK
Lists
List of handgun cartridges | List of rifle cartridges | List of firearms
German-made firearms and light weapons of World War II
Side arms (Pistole)
Mauser C96 | Luger | Walther P38 | Walther PPK | Sauer 38H | Mauser HSc
Rifles & carbines (Gewehr & Karabiner)
Karabiner 98k | Gewehr 43/Karabiner 43 | StG44/MP44 | FG42 | StG45(M)
Submachine guns ( Maschinenpistole )
Bergmann MP18 | MP38/MP40 "Schmeisser" | MP3008 "Volks MP"
Machine guns & other larger weapons
MG08 | MG34 | MG42 | Faustpatrone | Panzerfaust | Panzerschreck

Flammenwerfer 35 | Panzerbüchse 39 | Granatwerfer 36 | Granatwerfer 42

Notable foreign-made infantry weapons
P.640(b) | Vis.35 | Vz.24/G24(t) | MG26(t) | Panzerbüchse 35(p)
German-made cartridges used by the Wehrmacht
7.92 x 57 mm | 7.63 x 25 mm Mauser | 7.92 mm Kurz | 7.65 mm Luger | 9mm Luger