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[[Category:.380 ACP firearms]]
[[Category:.380 ACP firearms]]
[[Category:Hungarian inventions]]
[[Category:Hungarian inventions]]
[[Category:Early semi-automatic pistols]]


[[fr:Frommer Stop/12M/19M]]
[[fr:Frommer Stop/12M/19M]]

Revision as of 00:12, 23 June 2012

Frommer Stop
Frommer Stop in caliber 7.65mm Browning
TypePistol
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Service history
Used byHungarian Armed Forces, Honvédség
WarsWorld Wars I and II
Production history
Designed1912
VariantsPisztoly 12M, Pisztoly 19M, Pisztoly 39M
Specifications
Mass610 g (22 oz)
Length165 mm (6.5 in)
Barrel length95 millimeters (3.7 in)

Cartridge7.65mm/.32 ACP and 9mm Kurz/.380 ACP
ActionRecoil-operated
Rate of fireSemi-automatic
Muzzle velocity280 m/s (919 ft/s)
Feed system7 rounds (detachable box magazine)

The Frommer Stop is a Hungarian long-recoil pistol manufactured by Fémáru-, Fegyver és Gépgyár (FÉG) [Metalware, Weapons and Machine Factory] in Budapest. It was designed by Rudolf Frommer, and its original design was adopted as the Pisztoly 12M in 1912, created for the Honvédség. The handgun was manufactured in various forms from 1912-1945 and used in the Hungarian Armed Forces. The Stop is 165 millimeters (6.5 in) long with a 95 millimeters (3.7 in) 4-groove rifled barrel. Unloaded weight is 610 g (22 oz) and the detachable box magazine holds 7 rounds.

The predecessor to the Stop pistol, the M1910, was chambered in a proprietary 7.65mm (.32 ACP) cartridge having a crimp in the casing at the base of the bullet. This round achieved a velocity of 920 feet per second (280 m/s) from the gun. Frommer redesigned the pistol with a more conventional layout. Patented in 1912, this variant was produced from 1919 to 1939, under the name Pisztoly 19M. It was adopted as the official sidearm of the Hungarian Armed Forces. The last variant of the Stop, the Pisztoly 39M, was produced in 9mm Kurz (.380 ACP) however it was never adopted as a service pistol.

References