henderson field
New in Town
- Messages
- 19
- Location
- Cambridge, UK
Vintage Heat
Two *******s that spring to mind for the between the wars era are the Steyr-Hahn M1912 and the Webley Forsbury.
The former is an Austrian made automatic ******, developed just before the First World War and chambered for the 9mm Steyr round. It is slightly unusual in that it is loaded from a stripper-clip rather than a removable box magazine.
The Webley is another unusual weapon being a self-loading revolver. When fired, the top part of the receiver ( including the cylinder) slides backwards, cocking the hammer and rotating the cylinder ready for the next shot. It was produced in a 6 shot .455in and a ( much rarer) 8 shot .38 version. I gather that competition shooters had a handicap imposed on them as the recoil was softer than a normal *** of the same calibre.
I don't know of anyone famous using the Steyr but the Forsbury appeared in the Maltese Falcon as Sam Spade's late partner's ***.
Cheers,
HF
Two *******s that spring to mind for the between the wars era are the Steyr-Hahn M1912 and the Webley Forsbury.
The former is an Austrian made automatic ******, developed just before the First World War and chambered for the 9mm Steyr round. It is slightly unusual in that it is loaded from a stripper-clip rather than a removable box magazine.
The Webley is another unusual weapon being a self-loading revolver. When fired, the top part of the receiver ( including the cylinder) slides backwards, cocking the hammer and rotating the cylinder ready for the next shot. It was produced in a 6 shot .455in and a ( much rarer) 8 shot .38 version. I gather that competition shooters had a handicap imposed on them as the recoil was softer than a normal *** of the same calibre.
I don't know of anyone famous using the Steyr but the Forsbury appeared in the Maltese Falcon as Sam Spade's late partner's ***.
Cheers,
HF


