A personal defense weapon (PDW) is a compact semi-automatic or fully automatic firearm similar in most respects to a submachine gun, but firing an (often proprietary) armor-piercing rifle round, giving a PDW better range, accuracy and armor-penetrating capability than submachine guns, which fire pistol-caliber cartridges. The class of weapon as it exists today evolved as a hybrid between a submachine gun and a carbine, retaining the compact size and ammunition capacity of the former while adding the ammunition power, accuracy and penetration of the latter.
During the interwar period, the Argentine firm Hispano Argentina de Automotives SA (HAFDASA) introduced the C-2 machine pistol issued to armoured vehicle personnel. This weapon was basically a short variant of the C-4 submachine gun, fed from a 40/50 round casket box magazine depending on which calibre the weapon is chambered. Although the C-2 was an effective weapon, it did not see much service outside Argentina but predates designs such as the Škorpion vz. 61 and Ingram MAC-10.
Pistols generally were considered too limited in effectiveness for the role. In the First World War, the Mauser C96 and artillery versions of the Luger pistol were issued with attachable shoulder stock holsters and could partially meet this requirement. The World War II era M1 carbine can be considered a forerunner of modern personal defense weapons. It filled a similar role; it was not primarily intended for front line troops, but for support personnel such as drivers, engineers and medics to defend themselves in an emergency. Pistol-caliber submachine guns could fill the role, but were historically considered automatic weapons for front-line uses.
In 1986, United States Army Infantry School based at Fort Benning issued the reference document ''Smalls Arms Strategy 2000'', which defines the APDW (Advanced Personal Defense Weapon).
PDWs were developed during the late 1980s for non-combatant troops as compact automatic weapons that could defeat enemy body armor. The earliest PDWs marketed as such were the Heckler & Koch MP5K-PDW and the GG-95 PDW. Standard pistols and submachine guns chambered for pistol rounds had proven ineffective against armored soldiers and compact lightweight weapons capable of penetrating body armor were needed. In this role, they were supposed to be a more convenient alternative to the standard assault rifle, as their smaller size and lighter weight would be less of an encumbrance to a person whose primary function on the battlefield was not frontline fighting.
The PDW concept has not been widely successful, among other reasons because PDWs are not significantly cheaper to manufacture than full sized assault rifles, and are more expensive than most SMGs while being less effective in scenarios where armor-piercing ammunition is unavailable or unnecessary (such as most civilian and law enforcement applications). The potential military market for PDWs has been dampened, due to the introduction of carbines based on full-size assault rifles (such as the M4 Carbine variant of the M16A2) that retain most features of and compatibility with their full-sized relatives.
Additionally, PDWs usually use a special cartridge, such as the 5.7x28mm cartridge for the FN P90 or 4.6x30mm for the Heckler & Koch MP7, which are not compatible with existing pistol or rifle rounds. A different take on this is the Russian made PP-2000, which can fire the common 9x19mm Parabellum round or a special armor-piercing version to give it the same capabilities as other PDWs.
Though they have not become very popular for military applications, personal defense weapons have been acquired by many special forces and counter-terrorist groups as direct replacements for submachine guns. Like submachine guns, PDWs are small and light weapons, and their high rate of fire and lower recoil enable higher accuracy. Assault rifles and carbines, by comparison, are generally heavier and have higher muzzle blast and recoil and may overpenetrate due to their rifle rounds.
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