Walther 7.65
mm PPK and 9 mm short PPK/S - The classics
Since 07-11-06

Often imitated but never duplicated: The elegant lines of the legendary Walther PPK have caught the imagination of the entire world for nearly 75 years. Developed in 1931, the Walther PPK continues to thrill the shooting public, and the legend lives on. The PPK/S, with a longer frame for one additional cartridge, and the PPK are now both produced in the USA under licence.
|
PPK/S
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
.380 ACP (Automatic Colt Pistol)
(9mm Browning Short)
(9mm Kurz)
(9mm Corto)
http://www.reloadbench.com/cartridges/p380acp.html
Introduced by the Belgium firm FN in 1912,
the 9mm Browning short is one of several pistol cartridge designed by John
Browning. In some European countries, this cartridge has also been designated as
the 9mm Kurz and 9mm Corto, but in the United Sates it goes by the name of .380
Automatic or .380 ACP (Automatic Colt Pistol)
Although the more powerful
9mm Parabellum has enjoyed greater popularity over the years, thousands upon
thousands of autoloading pistols have been manufactured in .380 ACP. Many
American and foreign arms makers have offered or continue to offer compact
pistols in this caliber including Colt, Savage, Remington, Llama, Star, FIE,
Browning, Walther, and Beretta. Various European police departments have adopted
the .380 and it has even gained status as a military cartridge in countries such
as Sweeden, Italy, and Czechoslovakia.
In the United States, the .380 ACP is classified as a cartridge best suited for
self defense. This is as it should be simply because the pistols available in
this caliber aren't designed for sporting use. The .380 cartridge is powerful
enough for taking varmint sized game cleanly at close to medium ranges, but the
relatively poor accuracy of most pistols in this caliber limits its effective
range to about 15 short paces.
Due to the extremely limited capacity of the .380 case, a relatively fast
burning powder such as
HP38 is the best choice for handloaders. Bullets weighing from 88grains to
100 grains at 900 to 1000 fps duplicate the performance of most factory loads.
Source: Hodgdon Data Manual, 26th Edition