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Walther p1 production years
Walther p1 production years









walther p1 production years
  1. #Walther p1 production years install
  2. #Walther p1 production years plus
  3. #Walther p1 production years crack

Have you tried your friend's barrel on your pistol? Even if you don't fire it with that barrel, it may give you some different dimensional readings. I have always believed that recent P38 barrels were all lined.īarrels are available, but you should wince before looking here:

#Walther p1 production years crack

The only trouble I've had with mine was a pierced primer causing the topcover to vanish, and after a heck of a lot of shooting a crack formed in the slide in the area of the locking block recess, necessitating replacement. I was with my Dad when he picked it up from the importer, Interarms, in 1967. I have a P38 that was an over-run on a contract for the German police. The P1 is a bit easier for me to carry than my CZ85-B, although I really like the CZ with its double-stack magazine. I don't have my machine shop set up at the moment because I recently moved it, so I will try getting a Walther replacement instead of machining my own. I was going to machine my own from an eight-groove Israeli 9mm Wolverine Carbine barrel blank I picked up new for cheap.

#Walther p1 production years plus

My next step is to get a Walther replacement barrel, although I don't yet know where to find one plus I'm a bit fearful of what I may have to pay for it. I forgot to mention that I re-crowned the muzzle as one of the very first things I did (I just added that to my original post so don't worry that you missed reading it - you didn't, it wasn't there until just now). I would like to use the pistol as a carry gun and for that it needs to be accurate enough to give me the confidence to use it where I don't have to worry about hitting more than what I'm aiming at. Hi, misionary5155 and rhead, the way it shoots sure is a bummer. Unfortunately because the barrel liner is silver-brazed inside the old barrel assembly and consequently covered up by it, if there is indeed a split, it is hidden from view.Īny other similar tales of woe with the Walther P38 or P1? From the evidence of the shot placement being so radically low along with key-holing, it is my educated guess that the barrel liner has a longitudinal split that extends to the muzzle and opens up under pressure when fired. But what I am interested in at this point is if anyone else has had similar bizarre woes with a rebuilt Walther P38 or P1. I also have a CZ85-B 9mm that is a darned good shooter, so I already have experience with what works for a correctly-functioning 9x19mm pistol.Īt this point I am not especially interested in any further trouble-shooting of this P1 since I have already covered it as thoroughly as is possible without changing the barrel.

walther p1 production years

One of our resident 9mm Luger cartridge gurus is 9.3X62AL and back three years ago the two of us quite thoroughly and systematically went over everything that could be causing the troubles and we basically came to the conclusion that whatever is causing the problem with my particular Walther P1 is NOT within the realm of the commonplace things that affect the already notoriously cranky 9mm Luger cartridge. But of course that did nothing for the key-holing and 14-inch diameter shot spread on the target.

#Walther p1 production years install

The one thing I did that corrected the four-foot low shot placement was to machine and install a new rear sight that is a full quarter of an inch higher than the original. I also crowned the muzzle, I chucked the barrel up in my lathe and re-cut the crown along with putting in a slight 60° inside bevel.

walther p1 production years

I tried Unique, Green Dot, and Blue Dot powder loads all the way down to where it wouldn't cycle the action. I also tried 0.359" 115-grain cast boolits with no improvement. The barrel slugs at 0.358" and since it will chamber cartridges loaded with 0.358" copper jacketed bullets I tried those, without it changing anything. I compared its dimensions and appearance to another refurbished P1 purchased at the same time and there is no difference between the two pistols except the other one shoots 2-inch groups at 25 yards without being low or key-holing, and mine doesn't. When I first got it and discovered its ills, I slugged the barrel, measured the sights, and basically gave it a good inspection to see what all was wrong. It shoots 48-inches low (yep, a full FOUR FEET low) at 25 yards and it patterns like a shotgun, making a 14-inch pattern at 25 yards with most bullets key-holing. Mechanically it is a real dream to shoot. It operates like a Walther should - no jams or mis-feeds, and it digests everything I have reloaded for it.

walther p1 production years

It has all new upper slide parts and a re-lined barrel. Three years ago I bought an arsenal refurbished West German Police Walther P1 9mm pistol.











Walther p1 production years