Which tokarev to buy




















I would check out the Norinco Model in 9mm. Why get one in an odd caliber. I have never had trouble with mine. Quoted: Is there such a beast? If so, tell me where to find one. Quoted: I would check out the Norinco Model in 9mm. I like the caliber, but aesthetically, I find it odd.

There isn't one. Even in a large frame Tanfoglio, the round is too long but. Quoted: 7. Very flat shooting. My tokarevs do surprisingly well at yards. Quoted: Quoted: I would check out the Norinco Model in 9mm. And they penetrate better than just about all outside of the new.

Yugo 57 Better grip and a functional added safety. The commercial safeties added to Chinese and some Russian imports is unreliable and not very safe.. The added safety on Polish and Romanians is an abortion.

Best Tok of course is one in original condition with no stupid safety added Having for me great pistol of Poland; high polish commissar grade of bluing Better than capitalist bluing of Hartford.

Great triumph of workers lovely for having. Quoted: If I had to pick one for combat? Grip is longer and feels better. If I had to pick one as a collectible. Russian Me? Quoted: There isn't one.

Quoted: Quoted: If I had to pick one for combat? I like the Yugo as well. I have a few. I have a few Romanian and 2 Polish as well. I have one Chinese that was a bring-back from Vietnam apparently but no paperwork. I figured that was a given. I love my M It doesn't like hollow points.

The safeties don't look like shit and the longer grip feels a lot better than that of the other variants. Soviet of course What safety? If it could only talk It would say "Damn I'm tired".

The Canucks can get shiny dip-blued Soviet refurbs of that era but they are all bin assembled and forced matched like the Mosin refurbs. I only need the Yugo to complete the Tokarev collection. They work. It is a good gun to get down the muscle memory for working with heel mag catch guns. Shut a whole lot of surp 7.

Quoted: And they penetrate better than just about all outside of the new. Quoted: Why? What is wrong with the tokarev design? Quoted: Quoted: I'm a fan of the cartridge Quoted: Exactly, but somebody should do one. Quoted: Quoted: There isn't one. Quoted: Soviet of course I can honestly say, it really doesn't matter. They're all the same except the Yugo M57 with a longer magazine.

Fit, finish, function - pretty much the same. They will last forever. I have shot so many tins through mine and never had issues or problems The M57 is the nicest one, though mags are overpriced. Quoted: The M57 is the nicest one, though mags are overpriced. However I would take the Polish if given a choice. Yugo or Polish. Anyone have a source for Polish ones? I have one and it has been a super reliable shooter.

The longer grip makes a big difference. Order placed for the M Anyone have a deal on magazines for this handgun? Quoted: How about this?

Take a TT33 frame and remove the grip section. Then machine it to accept STI grip frame. Now use a 3d printer to make a polymer grip and magwell slightly deeper than normal. Then for mags Yeah, that's where my plan collapses. Posted Via AR Com Mobile. Some pistols may have been initially made in the Soviet Union and sent to China. It is also likely that the Soviets may have supplied machinery and tooling to produce the pistols. Within a relatively short time, however, China was producing the Type 51 at multiple factories.

There may be slight variations in pistols made at different factories. Estimates of the number of Type 51 pistols produced between and are over , Though adopted in , production does not appear to have started until and continued until The most common years of production for pistols found in the USA are and That is logical since most are Vietnam War trophies.

Production figures for Type 54 pistols are estimates but in his excellent book The Complete Book of Tokarev Pistols see review at the end of this article , Cameron White estimates that between and about , were produced. Although Type 54 pistols were produced between and or later , it is difficult speculate on the total. The magazine release is at the base of the grip rather than a push button frame mounted release. North Korean Tokarevs are rarely seen in the USA and if found are snapped up by collectors at big prices.

Reportedly, a few were captured in Vietnam. Some Warsaw Pact countries produced their own versions of the Tokarev.

The wz. Around , wz. A substantial number of training wz. Designated the 48M, it was adopted for the Hungarian armed forces in and manufactured until It was replaced in by the PA63 in 9x18mm caliber. The normally accepted production figure for 48M Tokarevs is around , Among Tokarev collectors in the USA, a 48M without import markings or added safety is highly sought and brings a substantial premium. Even examples with added safeties are scarce.

The total number produced was , According to Cameron White, pistols were assembled from leftover parts until TTC pistols remained the primary military and police pistol in Romania until the late s. However, this pistol never went into production. Instead, development began in on what became known as the M Actual production of the M57 for the Yugoslavian armed forces did not begin until with production continuing until It remained the standard Yugoslavian military pistol until Military issue M57 pistols incorporate a crest atop the slide.

The number of M57 military pistols produced is over , There were also commercial versions of the M57 manufactured, including the M60 and M70 in 9x19mm caliber. An especially interesting Tokarev, which is based on the 48M, is the Tokagypt that was manufactured for Egypt. Originally, the Tokagypt contract was for 30, pistols, but it was cancelled when less than half had been delivered.

Those undelivered were sold on the commercial market with some coming to the USA. Because of the pressures generated by the 7. These have had a manual safety added, which makes them less desirable as a collectible, but more desirable as a shooter. Although a few sources had bulk corrosive ammo available, few had any current commercial ammo for sale. A friend and I decided to use this article as a reason to shoot his Chinese Tokarev. However, as I had finally managed to track down a couple of boxes of Fiocchi 7.

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