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Chinese Warlord Pistols: the "Horn Grip Type"

Interested in these guns? Check out the Kickstarter for my new book on the subject, "Pistols of the Warlords"! https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/headstamp/pistols-of-the-warlords?ref=c4pkft In the course of researching Chinese domestic pistols of the Warlord Era, I sorted through several hundred examples, and was able to identify six distinct patterns of uniquely Chinese designs. Once of these I have designated the Horn Grip Type, as almost all the examples identified use horn (sometime light yellowish and sometimes dark brown) for grip panels. These pistols are simple blowback actions with open slides, external hammers, and Eibar-style safety levers above their triggers. They are chambered for the .32 ACP cartridge. They have a characteristic style of rear sight that vaguely mimics the tangent sight and bolt of a C96 Mauser, but without any separate rear sight leaf. The part we would expect to be the rear sight slider is actually an unmoving piece used to hold the extractor in place. I cover all six different types of domestic Chinese design in "Pistols of the Warlords", but figured we could go through a variety of different examples of this particular type today. Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

English

I read that as "Horny Grip" as I scrolled past notifications on my phone. I think that's enough internet for one afternoon.

Anonymous

Clear examples of "if you don't understand it, copy exactly" Sandy Reid, inventor of modern ringed parachute harnesses.

Guido Schriewer

where the heck does one find such? man those markings are the bomb. unbelievable.

Anonymous

next stretch goal should be on the most famous chinese general of all, general tso

Joseph W Cupp

Those are some beautiful grips! This collection of handguns is amazing, these and some of the guns from Afghanistan just really amaze me. Yes I know that some of these came from established factories but the ones that Ian is showcasing are coming from small shops probably little more than blacksmith shops a few steps from a rice paddy where the smith is more used to repairing plows and hoes. The use of the light colored horn make a nice choice I have a couple of SAA with dark horn grips, now I've got to find someone that makes them with out of a light colored horn. Thanks Ian another great video.

Anonymous

Love the "not sight" sight markings and faux manufacturer and proof marks. I can easily visualize stodgy Mauser and FN executives handling one in their smoke-filled board rooms, performing a Mr. Spock raised eyebrow, and circulating a worldwide memo stating "That was not us. That was SOOOOOOOO not us" XD Very cool that you're covering these Ian - legit relics of pretty much lost history.