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- Author: sootch00
Name | Walther P99 |
---|---|
Caption | Walther P99, 9 mm version with green polymer frame. |
Origin | |
Type | Semi-automatic pistol |
Is ranged | yes |
Used by | See Users |
Designer | Horst Wesp |
Design date | 1993–1996 |
Manufacturer | Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen |
Production date | 1996–present |
Variants | P99QPQ, P99 Military, P990 (P99DAO), P99QA, P99AS, P99TA, P99C, P99C AS, P99C QA, P99C DAO, SW99 |
Weight | 9x19mm Parabellum: .40 S&W;: |
Length | 9x19mm Parabellum: .40 S&W;: |
Part length | 9x19mm Parabellum: .40 S&W;: |
Width | 9x19mm Parabellum: .40 S&W;: |
Height | |
Cartridge | 9x19mm Parabellum .40 S&W; 9x21mm IMI |
Action | Short recoil operated, locked breech |
Range | 60 m (9x19mm Parabellum) |
Velocity | 9x19mm Parabellum: .40 S&W;: |
Feed | 9x19mm Parabellum: 15-round detachable box magazine .40 S&W;: 12-round box magazine |
Sights | Interchangeable 3-dot notch sight |
The Walther P99 is a semi-automatic pistol developed by the German company Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen of Ulm for law enforcement, security forces and the civilian shooting market as a replacement for the Walther P5 and the P88. The P99 and its variants are also made under license by Fabryka Broni Radom.
The pistol is used by the German Police in North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate and has been ordered by Bremen, Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein, the Polish Police and the Finnish Army's special forces and military police, where it carries the designation PIST 2003 (Pistooli 2003).
The P99 has a polymer frame and steel slide. The slide is Tenifer treated (a nitriding process) which inhibits corrosion. It uses an internal striker as opposed to an external hammer, with a red-painted striker tip that protrudes from rear of the slide when the gun is cocked, as well as a loaded chamber indicator on the right side of the slide.
The original first generation P99 had a traditional Double-Action/Single-Action trigger with a decocker. When the slide is racked completely to the rear upon loading, the trigger remains in the forward position for the first shot and the Double-Action mode is activated. The trigger travel is 14 mm (0.55 in) long in the Double-Action mode at approximately trigger pull. On all subsequent shots, the trigger travel is reduced to 5 mm (0.2 in) at trigger pull. For manually deactivating the Single-Action mode without loading the pistol the P99 features a key or knob on the slide. The Double-Action mode can also be manually activated by moving the slide approximately 10 mm (0.4 in) back. Currently the original trigger is no longer offered and has been replaced by 3 trigger variants.
The striker protrudes visibly and palpably from the back of the slide when the firearm is in a constant partially cocked state. It should however be noted that the striker of the second generation P99QA variant does not protrude from the back of the slide, unless fired, as the firearm is in a constant partially cocked state.
Ergonomics were a key focus in the design of the firearm, and as a result, three interchangeable grip backstraps are included (small, medium and large) to accommodate various hand shapes and sizes; this feature permits most shooters a comfortable and efficient grip on the firearm. This adaptable grip was innovative at the time the P99 was introduced.
The P99 features four internal safeties, iron sights adjustable for both windage and elevation, tool-less take down, and an ambidextrous magazine release incorporated into the trigger guard. The lower forward edge of the frame also known as the dust cover has a mounting-bracket or rail interface system for attaching accessories, such as a tactical light or laser pointer.
The .40 S&W; caliber models incorporate a slightly larger slide in order to preserve the same recoil spring assembly used in its 9mm counterpart. The P99 is available in 4 colorations; a black frame with a black slide, a black frame with a titanium-coated slide, a military olive-drab frame with a black slide, and a desert tan frame with black slide. All three of these finishes incorporate the same black grip inserts that come with every P99. The compact versions of the P99 are only available in all black.
The P99 Rad variant is made under license by Fabryka Broni Radom in Poland and marketed as a military sidearm proposition.
The P99 Rad grip shape and texture has been altered when compared to the P99 variants and an extended ambidextrous slide release and extended ambidextrous magazine release levers are fitted as a standard feature. The standard sights are high-contrast 3 dot sights with contrast enhancements that have been painted with afterglow paint that can aid target acquisition under unfavourable lighting conditions. As an option the P99 Rad can also be fitted with self-luminous tritium night sights. The P99 Rad pistol is available with the DAO trigger mechanism with a trigger pull of approximately and the QA trigger mechanism with a trigger pull of approximately . The grip frame has an integrated mounting MIL-STD-1913 (Picatinny) rail for attaching tactical lights and laser sighting devices.
All 9mm P99s have always been completely German-made. In the past, some P99 .40 components were manufactured under license by S&W.; The barrel, slide and frame of all 100% German-manufactured P99s bear an "Eagle over N" proof mark of the German Proof House at Ulm. The mark further indicates the pistol was test-fired with a Proof Load; the "N" stands for nitrocellulose. Although almost all currently produced Walther P99s carry an engraving of "SMITH & WESSON Springfield, MA" on the front/right side of the slide, this only denotes importation by Smith & Wesson (currently an official importer) and not that it was manufactured by them.
Category:Walther semi-automatic pistols Category:Modern German weapons Category:James Bond gadgets and firearms Category:.40 S&W; firearms Category:9x21mm IMI firearms Category:9mm Parabellum firearms Category:Police weapons
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