These Small Pistols Saw Wide Service Among Officers, Spies and Those in Support Positions.
It may seem odd that the .32 ACP self-loader was so widely used by military organizations for nearly 100 years.
It is an even bet that in some far off outpost or in the pocket of a clandestine operative, a .32 ACP pistol is still on the front line somewhere as millions were manufactured.
A strong factor was availability. For much of the 20th century, the .32 ACP was a popular handgun with civilian shooters. When war came, the military establishments of many countries were dangerously short of handguns. With the production line going and quality pistols readily available, the .32 ACP handgun looked good.
Some served primarily as a badge of office. Others, such as the thousands of pistols issued by the French during World War I, appear to have been used hard. During World War II, with Germany occupying most of Europe, every rear area soldier, be he a quartermaster or pay clerk, had to have a pistol in hostile territory. The .32 ACP made sense and was available.
There were several generations of .32 ACP military pistols. There are those used prior to World War I, those developed between the wars and used in World War II, and post-war developments. Each is an interesting handgun. I can’t cover them all – that would take a volume – but here are some of the more interesting and overlooked handguns.
THE DREYSE
For every quality firearm there are many cheap guns, and for every famous gun there are many less well known. The Dreyse is a distinctive pistol with a clunky look, but it is well made of good material.
Handguns are made to win wars, to protect your person or for target shooting. But the primary interest of a company is that their products sell. By that standard the homely and awkward Dreyse Model 1907 pistol is a success as it sold well for over a decade. Louis Schmeisser is attributed with this design.
Denne historien er fra Inside Military Surplus Winter 2016-utgaven av Gun World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra Inside Military Surplus Winter 2016-utgaven av Gun World.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
The First Rule of a Gunfight: Get a Gun
It is a time-honored tradition within the firearms industry; a decades-old trend hobbling on, despite evidence contrary to its practices: A woman entering a gun store, walking onto a range or participating in an event inevitably hears some variation of the words, “That’s an awfully big gun for such a little lady!”
Breaking Products And Deadlines
Confessions of a product test junkie
Guns Open Doors Of Opportunity
A Shooting Competition In Russia Emphasizes The Importance Of Freethinking And How It Opens The Door For Women Shooters.
The Ruger 10 Mil
Just as everyone is down-chambering 1911s to 9mm, the sr1911 goes 10mm ... For when follow-up shots aren’t an option.
S&W's Superb 6.5
SMITH & WESSON’S M&P10 RIFLE GETS THE PERFORMANCE CENTER TREATMENT AND EMERGES, CHAMBERED IN 6.5 CREEDMOOR, READY TO GO THE DISTANCE.
The Renaissance Rifle
THE HENRY BIG BOY ALL-WEATHER OFFERS UP TRUE VERSATILITY LIKE NO OTHER RIFLE.
Ammo Of A Higher Caliber
CHOOSING THE BEST CALIBER AND BULLET TYPE FOR DEFENSIVE AMMO CAN BE A CONFUSING PROSPECT.
Arsenal RPK - 3R
The Soviet/Combloc Light Machine Gun Comes To America—as A Civilian-legal Semiauto.
Single-Shot Hunter
Uberti has updated the old winchester 1885 high wall design into a modern carbine with old west flair.
Best Bullet
The .44-40 WCF Is a Leading Candidate for the Best All-around Cartridge of the Old West Era.