Volkspistole
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The ''Volkspistole'' ("People's Pistol") was a program for an emergency
German German(s) may refer to: * Germany (of or related to) **Germania (historical use) * Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language ** For citizens of Germany, see also German nationality law **Ge ...
pistol design to help mitigate the loss of pistols, as the German troops had lost more than 110,000 pistols in the first half of 1944, when the project started (by the end of the year, an additional 170,000 had been lost), as
Carl Walther GmbH Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen (), or simply known as Walther, is a German firearm manufacturer, and a subsidiary of the PW Group. Founded by Carl Walther in 1886, the company has manufactured firearms and air guns at its facility in Germany f ...
,
Mauser Mauser, originally Königlich Württembergische Gewehrfabrik ("Royal Württemberg Rifle Factory"), was a German arms manufacturer. Their line of bolt-action rifles and semi-automatic pistols has been produced since the 1870s for the German arm ...
, and
Spreewerk Metallwarenfabrik Spreewerk GmbH was a German weapons manufacturing company. Spreewerk produced a number of important weapons and components before and during World War II including 280,880 of the Walther P.38 pistol which was the standard service ...
, the three major producers of the current service pistol, the
Walther P38 The Walther P38 (originally written Walther P.38) is a 9 mm semi-automatic pistol that was developed by Carl Walther GmbH as the service pistol of the Wehrmacht at the beginning of World War II. It was intended to replace the costly Luger P08 ...
, could not produce P38s fast enough to account for their losses. It was to be assembled from simple steel pressings with a minimum of machined parts and to be used by the
Volkssturm The (; "people's storm") was a levée en masse national militia established by Nazi Germany during the last months of World War II. It was not set up by the German Army, the ground component of the combined German ''Wehrmacht'' armed forces, ...
. Only prototypes were produced before the end of
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
. These prototypes had various unusual locking systems to figure out a cheaper design that the short recoil action of the P38. They also all reused the P38's magazine, another pivotal point in the plan's goal for low-cost production. Three prototypes were designed by Walther, Mauser and Gustloff-Werke, and all three failed. These prototypes had slightly different actions: * For the Walther design, a rotating barrel design, extremely unique for the time, and only seen on a handful of modern handguns, such as the Beretta Px4 Storm. The original design failed, and Walther soon switched to a milled slide, contrary to the specifications of the program. * For the Gustloff-Werke design, they simply submitted a 9x19mm redesign of a previous (also failed) simple blowback prototype of Gustloff-Werke's for the 7.65×21mm Parabellum cartridge designed for the original
Luger pistol The Pistole Parabellum—or Parabellum-Pistole (Pistol Parabellum), commonly known as just Luger or Luger P08 is a toggle-locked recoil-operated semi-automatic pistol. The Luger was produced in several models and by several nations from 1898 ...
. While it is rumored that five Gustloff-Werke examples were made, there is no primary source, and no currently remaining designs exist. Gustloff-Werke never designed a successful firearm (their only other major designs being the
Volkssturmgewehr The Volkssturmgewehr ("People's Storm - Rifle") is the name of several rifle designs developed by Nazi Germany during the last months of World War II. They share the common characteristic of being greatly simplified as an attempt to cope with sev ...
and the first pistol), and their only contribution to firearms mainly focused on concentration camp slave labor producing
Karabiner 98k The Karabiner 98 kurz (; " carbine 98 short"), often abbreviated Karabiner 98k, Kar98k or K98k and also sometimes incorrectly referred to as a K98 (a K98 is a Polish carbine and copy of the Kar98a), is a bolt-action rifle chambered for the 7.92× ...
. * For the Mauser design, a
gas-delayed blowback Blowback is a system of operation for self-loading firearms that obtains energy from the motion of the cartridge case as it is pushed to the rear by expanding gas created by the ignition of the propellant charge. Several blowback systems exist wit ...
system borrowed from the Volkssturmgewehr, which proved too costly and the Mauser pistol was soon switched to a cheaper simple blowback action which also failed. A very small number of designs of gas delayed blowback pistols exist, such as the Heckler & Koch P7,
Steyr GB The Steyr GB is a double-action 9×19mm Parabellum caliber, large-framed semi-automatic pistol employing a gas-delayed blowback action. As such the GB abbreviation stand for ''Gasbremse'' (gas brake). It was designed in 1968, intended as a replac ...
, and more recent Laugo Arms Alien. Each time, the design is intended to increase accuracy, reliability, and overall durability, but never to make the pistol cheaper, in fact, each of the three is or was extremely expensive, raising some questions as to why Mauser assumed that it would be at all suitable for the program. When the most recent, the Alien, was designed in 2020, it retailed for $5,000 US, ten times the MSRP of the most common pistol in the U.S., the
Glock 19 Glock is a brand of polymer- framed, short recoil-operated, locked-breech semi-automatic pistols designed and produced by Austrian manufacturer Glock Ges.m.b.H. The firearm entered Austrian military and police service by 1982 after it was th ...
.


References

* * http://bratishka.ru/archiv/2006/11/2006_11_16.php


External links


Walther ''Volkspistole''
Forgotten Weapons
Mauser ''Volkspistole''
Forgotten Weapons World War II infantry weapons of Germany Semi-automatic pistols of Germany 9mm Parabellum semi-automatic pistols {{pistol-stub