What gun is this? ISSF compliant?
Moderators: pilkguns, m1963, David Levene, Spencer, Richard H
The documents behind the first pic are Patent documents in Cyrillic. Spencer, I'm not so sure I see a magazine. If you look where the bolt ends up in battery, visualize where a round might be picked up from a magazine. It may use a tubular magazine under the barrel. Hard to say without a view of the other side. It looks Walther-ish, but I can't see a magazine crammed into the space in front of the trigger.. It also looks like the centerline of the bore is exactly even with the overhang of the grip tang. This may be an old .22 short design that simply never made production. I can't read the documents well enough to note the designer. The clearest date looks like 27 September 1964. The barrel shroud looks Like "ARAKOV S8" but just a guess. For all we know it is an underwater dart gun used by KGB.
toznerd
toznerd
The global look is of a .22 short RF pistol.
The breech is pretty low and inline with a compensator (light grey part) what give the possibility that the barrel is very low, inline with the breech, i.e. located in the lower part of the light grey module.
The breech spring is well visible and there is something that looks like the rear part of the firing pin at the rear of the breech. There is also a hammer visible on the upper part of the trigger assembly.
Then there is space above the compensator+barrel+breech, could it be possible that the magazine is tubular and located above the barrel ?
The breech is pretty low and inline with a compensator (light grey part) what give the possibility that the barrel is very low, inline with the breech, i.e. located in the lower part of the light grey module.
The breech spring is well visible and there is something that looks like the rear part of the firing pin at the rear of the breech. There is also a hammer visible on the upper part of the trigger assembly.
Then there is space above the compensator+barrel+breech, could it be possible that the magazine is tubular and located above the barrel ?
Patent documents are dated 1963-1964.
Last name of the author is not readable (4-5 char). First/middle name, from what I can tell, is Vladimir Anatolievich (or Leonidovich or Davidovich)?
Patent was awarded to the individual, not to the company and registered in Russian Federation.
Lower documents are Authors certificates.
Last two patents state the inventions names:
Cartridge for Self-loading Pistol;
Sport Self-loading Pistol.
Note: "Self-Loading" pistol in Russian is what called semiautomatic.
Last name of the author is not readable (4-5 char). First/middle name, from what I can tell, is Vladimir Anatolievich (or Leonidovich or Davidovich)?
Patent was awarded to the individual, not to the company and registered in Russian Federation.
Lower documents are Authors certificates.
Last two patents state the inventions names:
Cartridge for Self-loading Pistol;
Sport Self-loading Pistol.
Note: "Self-Loading" pistol in Russian is what called semiautomatic.
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fwiw, I just ordered this book on target pistols of the DDR:
http://www.dwj-medien.de/oxid.php/sid/f ... -Pistolen/
But that pistol is surely Russian, if not Ukranian...
http://www.dwj-medien.de/oxid.php/sid/f ... -Pistolen/
But that pistol is surely Russian, if not Ukranian...
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