Browning High-Power / FN GP35 Single-Action; Semi-Automatic - TopicsExpress



          

Browning High-Power / FN GP35 Single-Action; Semi-Automatic Pistol.. The Browning High-Power (or Fabrique Nationale FN GP35 - GP for Grande Puissance) has a lineage dating back to the original John Browning Colt M1911 and became the last of Brownings designs before his death in 1926. Design work on the High-Power began in 1914 and was still ongoing in 1926, leaving the pistol in the hands of FNs chief designer Dieudonne Saive. Saive replaced Brownings original striker design to a more traditional hammer mechanism. Chambered for the 9x19 Parabellum cartridge, the High-Power was fed from a double-stacked magazine holding thirteen rounds. Despite being ready for manufacture, the firearm saw itself delayed with the onset of the Great Depression, pushing its formal release until 1935 - hence the FN GP35 designation. Externally, the High Power presented a very conventional look for a semi-automatic pistol with many of the same lines as featured in the Colt M1911. The slide dominated the upper regions of the gun and protected the critical internal working components as well as housing the barrel and recoil spring, the latter fitted under the barrel. The sides of the slide contained the requisite finger grooves for managing the assembly during cocking. The hammer was clearly visible at the rear of the weapon above the tang. The trigger was held within an oblong ring and connected to the angled pistol grip lined with a grip pattern along both sides. Magazines were inserted into the base of the grip in a conventional way with the cartridge ejection port seated along the right side of the body. With the arrival of World War 2 in the late 1930s, the German Army steamrolled its way throughout Europe the following year. This included Belgium - the home of Fabrique Nationale and its factories. As such, production of the Browning High Power was now in German control and the Army took to local production of the fine pistol under the designation of Pistole 640(b) (b for belgisch to signify its Belgian origins). The pistol managed an existence in this fashion in some number until the end of the war. During the war itself, copies of the gun managed their way to Britain to which the sidearm was reproduced for the British, Canadian and Chinese armies. For the British, the type proved useful as a paratrooper and special operative sidearm for its high-capacity magazine and proven an-stopping capabilities over that of their standard issue revolvers. Local production was taken up in Canadian factories and dispersed to awaiting forces within time. As the war ended with the Nazi defeat in 1945, FN factories began free production of the High Power once again. The war had proven the Browning design as reliable, rugged and capable. Such was its impression upon the British that British Army adopted the type as their standard sidearm in 1954. Beyond this some 90 total nations took delivery of the weapon for various military, security, police and civilian roles. The Browning High Power was produced through several variations that featured different trigger systems, fixed or adjustable sights and even an optional fixed wooden holster stock to improve aim. Early production forms included a version that fitted a tangent rear site while later production models were witnessed chambered for .40 Smith & Wesson ammunition or .357 SIG ammunition. Operators: Argentina; Australia; Bahrain; Bangladesh; Barbados; Belgium; Belize; Bermuda; Bolivia; Botswana; Brunei; Burundi; Cambodia; Canada; Chile; China; Colombia; Cuba; Cyprus; Democratic Republic of Congo; Denmark; Dominican Republic; Ecuador; El Salvador; Estonia; Finland; Ghana; Germany; Greece; Guatemala; Honduras; Hungary; India; Indonesia; Iran; Iraq; Ireland; Israel; Jamaica; Jordan; Kenya; Kuwait; Lebanon; Liberia; Libya; Lithuania; Luxembourg; Malawi; Malaysia; Mozambique; Myanmar; Nazi Germany; Nepal; Netherlands; Nigeria; Oman; Panama; Papua New Guinea; Paraguay; Peru; Philippines; Poland; Portugal; Rhodesia; Romania; Rwanda; Saudi Arabia; Sierra Leone; Singapore; Sri Lanka; Sudan; Suriname; Syria; Tanzania; Togo; Trinidad and Tobago; Tunisia; Uganda; United Arab Emirates; United Kingdom; United States; Uruguay; Venezuela; Zimbabwe
Posted on: Wed, 13 Aug 2014 14:43:36 +0000

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