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Some cartridges, such as the [[.44 Magnum]], are so powerful that the spring required to slow the recoiling barrel and slide becomes very difficult to compress by hand, making it very difficult for most people to load the pistol. Magnum cartridges are often found chambered in pistols which use a [[gas operation|gas operated]] design, more commonly found in a [[rifle]]. One example of a gas operated pistol is the [[Desert Eagle]].
Some cartridges, such as the [[.44 Magnum]], are so powerful that the spring required to slow the recoiling barrel and slide becomes very difficult to compress by hand, making it very difficult for most people to load the pistol. Magnum cartridges are often found chambered in pistols which use a [[gas operation|gas operated]] design, more commonly found in a [[rifle]]. One example of a gas operated pistol is the [[Desert Eagle]].


Blowback pistols are simpler to make and thus cheaper, but the blowback mechanism can only practically be used with low pressure cartridges of relatively low power, of typically [[.380 ACP]] caliber or smaller. With caliber [[9 x 19 mm]] or larger, the slide mass starts to become excessive, and so few blowback handguns in such caliber exist; the primary exceptions are simple, inexpensive guns such as those made by [[HiPoint Firearms]], and semi-automatic versions of blowback [[submachine gun]]s.
Blowback pistols are simpler to make and thus cheaper, but the blowback mechanism can only practically be used with low pressure cartridges of relatively low power, of typically [[.380 ACP]] caliber or smaller. With caliber [[9 x 19 mm]] or larger, the slide mass starts to become excessive, and so few blowback handguns in such caliber exist; the primary exceptions are simple, inexpensive guns such as those made by [[Hi-Point Firearms]], and semi-automatic versions of blowback [[submachine gun]]s.


In contrast, locked breech mechanisms are used for some 0.32, 0.380 caliber pistols; most 9 mm caliber pistols; and for nearly all pistols of 0.40, 0.45, and larger calibers. This keeps the mass of the slide lower, and the overall size of the pistol more managable.
In contrast, locked breech mechanisms are used for some 0.32, 0.380 caliber pistols; most 9 mm caliber pistols; and for nearly all pistols of 0.40, 0.45, and larger calibers. This keeps the mass of the slide lower, and the overall size of the pistol more managable.

Revision as of 07:30, 4 July 2006

Springfield Armory M1911A1 .45 ACP semi-automatic pistol

A Semi-automatic (also known as self-loading) pistol is a type of handgun that can be fired in semi-automatic mode, firing one cartridge for each trigger pull until running out of stored ammunition. This type of firearm uses a single chamber and a single barrel which remain in a fixed linear orientation relative to each other while being fired and re-loaded semi-automatically.

A semi-automatic pistol works by automatically extracting and ejecting a fired cartridge from the chamber, and then loading an unfired cartridge from a magazine into the chamber to be ready for the next trigger pull. This cycle is powered by using the energy of the explosive discharge of each cartridge that is fired.

Most types of semi-automatic pistols rely on a removable magazine to store unfired cartridges and it is from this magazine that new ammunition is supplied to reload the chamber upon firing the gun. The removable magazine is typically located inside a hollow hand grip, and is usually removed for reloading with fresh cartridges. Typically, the first round is manually loaded into the chamber by pulling back and releasing ("racking") the slide mechanism, after which recoil operation of the handgun when fired automatically extracts, ejects, and reloads the chamber until all rounds are fired. This mode of operation generally allows for faster reloading, and a larger number of stored cartridges being available, as compared to a revolver, but at the cost of a more complex design and mechanism which is potentially more prone to malfunctioning than a revolver.

Many modern semi-automatic pistols are double action only (DAO); that is, once a round is chambered, each trigger pull will both arm the hammer, striker, or firing pin, and will additionally release the same to fire a cartridge in one continuous motion. Each squeeze of the trigger on a DAO semi-automatic pistol remains uniformly consistent in terms of force required. The Kel-Tec P-32 is an example of this style of action. Normal carry mode for DAO semi-automatic pistols is with the magazine full, plus with a round chambered, with the gun holstered, usually with no safety, or, for those few pistols that do have a safety, with the safety OFF. DAO semi-automatic pistols are most generally recommended only in the smaller, self-defense oriented concealment-type pistols, rather than in target or hunting pistols.

Many other modern semi-automatic pistols are double action (DA); the hammer, striker, or firing pin may either be manually pre-cocked or it will be automatically cocked by the first trigger pull when starting to fire. The hammer, striker, or firing pin will be re-cocked fully by each subsequent firing of the pistol. Double action (DA) pistols have an inconsistent trigger pull effort if the hammer is cocked automatically by the first trigger pull. The first pull requires roughly twice as much force as subsequent firings from a pre-cocked condition. To learn to fire such DA semi-automatic pistols accurately often requires slightly more training to master the trigger mechanism fully than for DAO pistols, since there are two trigger states to master. The Beretta 92F/FS, a full-size service semi-automatic pistol is an example of this style of action. A common carry mode for DA semi-automatic pistols is with the magazine full, a round chambered, with the gun holstered and uncocked with the external safety unengaged (OFF.) An alternative carry mode, and the mode often used after firing just one or two cartridges, is with the magazine partially full, a round chambered, with the gun holstered, and cocked with the external safety engaged (ON.)

In contrast, a single action (SA) semi-automatic pistol must be cocked by pulling back on an exposed hammer for the first shot before pulling the trigger, despite having a round chambered, to fire the gun, if the pistol is in the state of being uncocked. This too requires additional training to achieve reliable operation in a tense self-defense situation, of remembering to cock the pistol before squeezing the trigger even when a round is chambered, whenever the hammer is not cocked. The famed Colt M1911 is an example of this style of action. All SA semi-automatic pistols exhibit this feature, and automatically cock the hammer when the slide is first racked to chamber a round. The normal, defensively-ready, carry-mode for such SA semi-automatic pistols is usually in Condition 1, also popularly known as cocked and locked (see photo of Springfield Armory M1911A1 above), that is, with the magazine full, a round chambered, the hammer fully cocked, and the thumb safety engaged (ON), at least for right-handed users. For many single action semi-automatic pistols, this only works well for right-handed users, as the thumb safety is located on the left side of pistol, and is easily accessible only for those who are holding the pistol in their right hand.

There is also technically a half-cock position on many SA semi-automatic pistols. Squeezing the trigger will not fire the gun when it is in the half-cocked position, and neither will dropping the gun in this state cause an accidental discharge. During WW II, an unofficial and unapproved carry mode for the SA M1911 by left-handed US soldiers in combat in the Pacific was with the gun carried with the magazine full, a round chambered, the gun in the half-cocked position, with the thumb safety (accessible only to right-handed users) positioned in the OFF (or FIRE) position. The primary advantage of the half-cocked position version the uncocked position in their particular scenario was for sound suppression, with a lesser advantage for avoiding accidental discharges if the gun was ever accidentally dropped. Cocking the gun from the uncocked position to the full-cocked position was much more 'noisy in the final seconds before combat than for either turning the safety OFF for right-handed users, or for cocking the gun from the half-cocked position to the full-cocked position for left-handed users. In general, however, single action semi-automatic pistols should never be carried with the safety OFF when cocked. Many modern SA semi-automatic pistols have had their safety mechanisms re-designed, so as to provide a thumb safety on both sides of the pistol, thereby better meeting the needs of left-handed as well as for right-handed users.

There also have been notable semi-automatic pistol designs with different traits than those generically described here, including those with a magazine fed with a stripper clip, and those with non-removable (sometimes called blind-box) magazines. These designs are rarely used in modern semi-automatic pistols. The famed Model C96, or "broomhandle Mauser," in its usual configuration had a non-removable magazine, which in contrast to most modern designs, was not inserted into a hollowed-out grip, and is an example of a non-removable magazine in a semi-automatic pistol.

Semi-automatic pistols utilize but one firing chamber that remains fixed in a constant linear position relative to the gun barrel. In contrast, although double-action revolvers can also be fired semi-automatically, their rounds are not fired from a single chamber, but rather are fired from each of 4 to 10 chambers, with 6 chambers typically being the most common, that are rotated into linear alignment with the barrel's position in turn just prior for each shot fired.

The language surrounding automatic, semi-automatic, self-loading, etc. often causes confusion due to differences in technical usage between different countries and differences in popular usage even within a country. For example, an automatic pistol technically refers to a machine pistol, although in popular American usage it is also used as a synonym for a semi-automatic pistol. In the case of pistols, an 'automatic pistol', a 'semi-automatic pistol', or a 'self-loading pistol', all usually imply a handgun that is semi-automatic, self-loading, and magazine-fed with a magazine that is removable, producing one shot fired for each trigger pull. If the term handgun is exchanged for pistol, then these terms can mean entirely different types of firearms than discussed in this article.

Technology

A self-loading pistol reloads the chamber with a new round automatically each time the weapon is fired, without additional action being required by the user. For a semi-automatic pistol, this is typically accomplished by recoil operation. (For a machine pistol, in contrast, this can be accomplished by recoil operation, or, less commonly, by siphoning off some of the gases created when the gun fires. Nonetheless, absolutes are rarely always true; for example, see Desert Eagle for an example of a semi-automatic pistol that does siphon off some of the gases instead of relying on short recoil operation. See Gas-Operated article for details on gas operation of firearms.

A semi-automatic pistol will fire only one shot per trigger pull, in contrast to a "fully automatic" or machine pistol which continues to fire as long as the trigger is held or until all rounds have been fired.

While both types of weapons operate on the same principles, fully automatic weapons must be built more ruggedly to accommodate the heat and shock caused by rapid firing, and it can be difficult (and illegal) to convert a semi-automatic pistol into a fully automatic mode of fire. A selective fire action pistol, though, can be converted back and forth with a simple flick of a switch, and often includes burst mode. Selective fire weapons are generally not available to civilians except (in the US) for those civilians holding a Class III Federal firearms license.

Actions, blowback vs. locked breech

Self-loading automatic pistols can be divided into "blowback" and "locked breech" categories according to their principle of operation. This classification roughly divides the operation into those specifically suitable for small-caliber versus large-caliber semi-automatic pistols.

In blowback semi-automatic pistols, typically .380 caliber (sometimes known as 9 mm Kurz, i.e., 9mm Short) or smaller, the barrel is fixed to the frame and the slide or bolt, in its foremost position, is held against the barrel only by the force of the recoil spring. The slide starts to move backwards immediately upon the gun being fired, as there is no locking action to hold the breechblock and slide locked with the barrel even temporarily. At the appropriate point in the rearward motion, extraction and ejection of the fired brass of the cartridge is accomplished, and the used brass is typically ejected to the right of the pistol. During the motion rearwards, the striker, hammer, or firing pin may be re-cocked. A spring, called a recoil spring, slows the movement of the slide as it is compressed. When the slide reaches the rear of its travel, the recoil spring is fully compressed (if not, the pistol may suffer a failure, called a "jam"). The slide begins to move forward under the force of the spring, stripping a new cartridge from the magazine and pushing the new cartridge into the chamber. Upon the slide returning to its fully-forward position, the pistol is ready once more to be fired by squeezing the trigger. The mass of the slide must be sufficient to hold the breech closed until the bullet exits the barrel, and the remaining pressure drops to a safe level. A cartridge with too high a pressure, or a slide with too little mass can cause the cartridge case to extract too early, causing a case rupture.

In contrast, in a locked breech design (typically .32 caliber or larger) the barrel is temporarily locked to the slide. The most common locked breech type is the short recoil design. In a short reciol pistol, the slide and barrel recoil together a short distance while locked together, until the cartridge-firing chamber pressure has dropped to a safe level. After sufficient travel to allow the bullet to exit and the pressure to drop, the barrel then unlocks from the slide, and the barrel's rearward motion is stopped. The ejection and loading of the new cartridge is similar to that in a blowback pistol. After the slide seats the new round into the chamber, the barrel begins to move forward with the slide, locking into place, at which point the cycle is complete.

Some cartridges, such as the .44 Magnum, are so powerful that the spring required to slow the recoiling barrel and slide becomes very difficult to compress by hand, making it very difficult for most people to load the pistol. Magnum cartridges are often found chambered in pistols which use a gas operated design, more commonly found in a rifle. One example of a gas operated pistol is the Desert Eagle.

Blowback pistols are simpler to make and thus cheaper, but the blowback mechanism can only practically be used with low pressure cartridges of relatively low power, of typically .380 ACP caliber or smaller. With caliber 9 x 19 mm or larger, the slide mass starts to become excessive, and so few blowback handguns in such caliber exist; the primary exceptions are simple, inexpensive guns such as those made by Hi-Point Firearms, and semi-automatic versions of blowback submachine guns.

In contrast, locked breech mechanisms are used for some 0.32, 0.380 caliber pistols; most 9 mm caliber pistols; and for nearly all pistols of 0.40, 0.45, and larger calibers. This keeps the mass of the slide lower, and the overall size of the pistol more managable.

Trigger mechanisms, double vs. single action

Another differing point among semi-automatic pistols are their trigger and ignition systems. Early designs used so-called "single-action" mechanisms whereby a hammer had to be manually cocked to fire the first shot (though for subsequent shots the hammer was cocked by the energy associated with the recoil from the preceding shot). This was usually somewhat mitigated, however, as racking the slide to chamber the first round would initially cock the hammer. Then, when the trigger was pulled, the hammer would hit the firing pin which would then strike the primer of the round in the chamber and fire the pistol, and subsequently the semi-automatic extraction, ejection, and re-loading functions as well as subsequent cocking of the hammer would be performed without any action on the part of the user. For carry, a round would be chambered, and the hammer would simply be blocked in its cocked position with a manual safety. These early designs could not prevent the pistol from firing if dropped on a hard surface on the muzzle of the barrel, as the firing pin was only held in place by a spring. There was also a (very rare) risk that such a pistol would fire in fully automatic mode if the spring retaining the firing pin become too weak with use or age. In that case, the pistol would start firing upon squeezing the trigger, and would only stop firing when out of ammunition, posing a great risk for its user. There was also a rare risk that a slam-fire could occur, when chambering a round to load the gun if the firing pin spring was weak, such that simply loading the gun could cause it to accidentally discharge.

Later designs introduced "double action" mechanisms which eliminated the need to cock the hammer manually first to fire the pistol. Instead, the hammer was cocked as the trigger was initially pulled. This first trigger pull in double action mode (uncocked hammer) was heavier than when in single action mode. After the first shot, the pistol reverted to single action mode because the rearward motion of the slide (which cycles the pistol) would also cock the hammer for the next round; the trigger pull weight in single action mode is usually half of what it is in double action mode. If the particular pistol has a manual safety, when it is engaged it will usually (depending on the design) de-cock the hammer and return the semi-automatic pistol to double action mode.

There are also "double action only" mechanism designs in which there is no single action mode, as the hammer, firing pin, or striker cannot stay in a cocked position. In most double action only designs, the trigger is disconnected while the hammer block safety is applied. Note that some double action pistols lack the firing pin safety, and some even lack any external manual safety, depending instead on a combination of the double action only mechanism with an internal hammerblock mechanism to prevent the firing pin from hitting the cartridge that is chambered in the event of accidentally dropping the gun on its muzzle. Such designs can be safely carried with a full magazine, and with a round in the chamber, and still remain safe even if accidentally dropped onto the muzzle. In many ways, such double action only mechanism semi-automatic pistols function for carry much like a revolver, which typically would be loaded only for 5 cylinders out of 6 for carry, with the hammer down on an empty cylinder, and which would not accidentally discharge if dropped.

Some double action only mechanism designs are sometimes also called "safe action" or "semi-double action" mechanism designs, implying there is no hammer and when one pulls the trigger one fully cocks the striker or firing pin until it releases and fires the pistol, all in one rather long trigger pull. When the trigger is in ready-to-fire position, the striker is blocked so that the semi-automatic pistol cannot fire if dropped.

History

After Hiram Maxim introduced his recoil-powered machine gun in 1883, several gunsmiths set out to apply the same principles to handguns, including Maxim. Maxim's designs for smaller firearms using his recoil-powered ideas never went into production.

In the 1880s, other designers worked on self-loading designs. The first model to gain any commercial success was the Borchardt-designed self-loading C-93 semi-automatic pistol which was designed in 1893 and made its public appearance in 1894. Borchardt invented the C-93 mechanism, but it was based in large part upon Maxim's toggle-lock principle. The C-93 featured a clever locking mechanism modelled after the human knee joint in which the mechanical joint is called a knee, or in German "Kniegelenk" (knee joint). The C-93 proved mechanically reliable, but was too large and bulky to receive widespread acceptance. Equipped with a screw-on wooden stock, the C-93 served well in small pistol carbines, however. Borchardt also developed the 7.65 x 25 mm Borchardt cartridge, around which the C-93 was built.

File:C96-5 .jpg
A Mauser C96 Broom-handle Semi-automatic Pistol being re-loaded

In 1896, Paul Mauser introduced his first model of the famous Mauser broom-handle semi-automatic pistol, the C96. Using the powerful 7.63 mm bottle-necked cartridge originally designed by Borchardt, the Mauser was the first self-loading pistol used extensively in battlefields, as in the South African War of 1899-1902. These semi-automatic pistols were usually made in 7.63 x 25 mm Mauser, but many were also eventually made in 9 x 19 mm Parabellum (9mm Luger).

File:M1911 Pistol US.jpg
A 1945-produced US M1911 A1 U.S. Army Colt (45 ACP and 32 ACP cartridges shown for size comparison)

In the United States in 1896, the first American gun designer to develop self-loading semi-automatic pistols was John Browning, whose models were manufactured by Colt in the US, and by the Belgian Fabrique Nationale in Europe. Like Luger's work conducted around the same time in Germany, Browning's first successful design was a 7.65 mm caliber design, the Browning M1900, although Browning designed a slightly different 7.65 mm Browning (32 Auto, 7.65x17mm SR) cartridge for his 32 caliber semi-automatic pistol which was different from Luger's 7.65 mm Luger (.30 Luger, 7.65 x 21 mm) cartridge. Browning also designed 0.25 ACP, .380 ACP, and .45 ACP cartridges in addition to 32 ACP cartridges for his semi-automatic pistol designs. He also designed the locked-breech action now commonly used by nearly all heavy-caliber semi-automatic pistols, and designed the .45 ACP Colt M1911 single-action semi-automatic pistol which was adopted by the US military in 1911 (hence the Model 1911 designation) and which remained in service for over 70 years. The Model 1911 is still in active use with some US special forces units.

File:Pistol Browning SFS.jpg
A Browning 9 millimetre Hi-Power semi-automatic pistol

Browning also co-designed the FN Browning Hi-Power, announced in 1922, during the last years of his life, working on this design until his death in 1926. It was a 9 mm Parabellum semi-automatic pistol and was the first high-capacity, semi-automatic pistol design to feature a double column magazine capable of holding 13 rounds (plus one chambered) in place of the single column magazine which Browning had favored in designing the earlier .45 ACP Colt M1911. (The earlier single column magazine design approach is still used to today, however, especially in deep-concealment semi-automatic pistols such as the Kel-Tec P-32.)

File:Post 37 109 1900Left.sized.jpg
M1900 American Eagle commercial re-creation of Georg Luger's Pistole Parabellum design

The next notable design was the 7.65 mm Luger by Georg Luger, which although successful in its function, nonetheless failed to have adequate stopping power and failed to win widespread acceptance. In 1902, Georg Luger's subsequent and similar 9 mm Luger Parabellum (9 x 19 mm) Pistole Parabellum design overcame the problem with inadequate stopping power and featured a greatly-improved Borchardt-type Knieglelenk (knee-joint) locking mechanism. Unlike Browning's locked-breech design, the barrel in a Knieglelenk design does not tip up and down while firing the gun, thereby improving theoretical shooting accuracy. Luger's 9mm Pistole Parabellum design was adopted by the German military and served as their standard sidearm during World War I. During World War II, Germany was the first nation to adopt a double action pistol, the Walther P38 which could be carried loaded (with a cartridge chambered) in a state where it was ready to fire at all times without the risk of an accidental discharge if dropped. It likewise used Luger's 9 mm Parabellum (9mm Luger) cartridge, which despite reaching its centennial in 2002, counting from its introduction in 1902, is still the most widely-used pistol cartridge in the world today, finding widespread popularity among military, police, and civilian users.

During World War II, the only major powers to still use revolvers as sidearms by the military were Britain, Russia and the United States. Though the British factory Webley and Scott had developed several adequate self-loading pistols, one of which was adopted by the British Police in 1911 and by the Royal Navy and Royal Marines before the First World War, their trusty revolvers were generally preferred by most British military. In Russia, Nagant M1895 revolvers remained the primary handgun because of a lack of semi-automatic pistols. In the United States, though, the Colt M1911A1 semi-automatic single-action pistol was most widely used, and both Colt and Smith & Wesson produced revolvers chambered for the same 45 ACP pistol ammunition as used in the Colt M1911A1, because of the great demand for handguns and the need to adopt a common cartridge for use among semi-automatic pistols and revolvers.

Beretta 92FS (current US Military/NATO 9 mm sidearm)

After World War II, most nations have eventually adopted 9mm Luger (9mm Parabellum) caliber pistols in Browning's locked-breech design for standard-issue military use. The most popular early choice was the previously-mentioned FN Browning Hi-Power, which was the first high capacity pistol; another popular model was the locked-breech Walther P38 because of its many modern safety features. The current US military choice is a variant of the Beretta 92F/FS.

In 1971 Smith & Wesson was the first company to offer a safe double-action, high-capacity pistol with its Model 59. CZ launched its CZ-75 in 1975. Beretta introduced its Beretta 92 in 1976. GLOCK introduced the ultra modern GLOCK 17 in 1982 and SIG-Sauer introduced its model SIG P226 in 1983. In the early 90s, Heckler & Koch combined what they thought were the most desirable attributes of semi-autos in their pistol, the HK USP. In 1995, Kel-Tec introduced their first compact 9mm Parabellum pistol, the Kel-Tec P11, for concealed carry. In 1999, Kel-Tec introduced their extremely-popular 32 ACP P-32 for deeply-concealed carry. Both of the Kel-Tec pistols are double-action-only (DAO) designs.

After the second World War, the trend uniformly seen is for self-loading, semi-automatic pistols to replace revolvers in military applications, and they have also done so, although slightly more slowly, in police and civilian use. Today, revolvers are mainly used in the fields of civilian self-defence, hunting, plinking, and target practice. Semi-automatic pistols, though, are becoming by far the most popular for deeply-concealed carry by licensed civilians, for use as primary handguns for police and military use, for use as back-up guns for police use, and for use where the 5 or 6 shots of a revolver are judged to be an inadequate number of rounds.

Famous semi-automatic handguns

The US military, French military, and Italian military have each chosen variants of the Beretta 92. The British military and US Navy SEALs have chosen the SIG P226. The Austrian, Finnish and Norwegian military have chosen the GLOCK 17.

On a worldwide basis, the GLOCK 17 and GLOCK 22 have become the most widely-used law enforcement semi-automatic pistols, although significant numbers of law enforcement organizations still use revolvers, especially in parts of the world where the need for a larger number of rounds being carried is not seen to be necessary.

Popular examples:

See also