Here are some images of LS Model's 1/1 scale Nambu Type 14 Japanese Semi Automatic Pistol.
From Wikipedia"
The Nambu pistol (南部拳銃 or 南部大型自動拳銃 Nanbu kenjuu or Nanbu ōgata jidou-kenjuu?) was a series of semi-automatic pistol produced by the Japanese company Koishikawa Arsenal later known as the Tokyo Artillery Arsenal.[1]
The series had five variants, the Type A Model 1902 (also called the
Grandpa Nambu), the Type A Model 1902 Modified (also known as the Papa
Nambu), the Type B (also known as the Baby Nambu), the Type 14 (南部十四年式自動拳銃) and the Type 94. The pistols were designed by Kijiro Nambu and saw extensive service during the Russo-Japanese War, Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II.
The Type A was made in very small numbers. Type A Modified and Type B
Nambus were never formally adopted by any branch of the armed forces of
Imperial Japan but were sold to officers through officer stores. The
Type 14 was adopted as an official sidearm. As World War II progressed,
and particularly in the final year of the war, in order to speed
production, Type 14s began to be more hastily manufactured with a
subsequent decline in quality.
The origin of the Nambu pistol series goes back to a design by Lieutenant General Kijiro Nambu. General Nambu claimed the design originated with experimentation during the "30 year Automatic Pistol Plan" of 1897 in Japan. It is probable that the pistol series was influenced by the Mauser C96,
after a Japanese commission toured Europe and reported recent
developments. The first Nambu type known as the Type A was completed in
1902. The Type A underwent trials with the Imperial Japanese Army but was never formally adopted. Many Original Type As were sold commercially to China and Siam. Coinciding with British customs, Japanese army officers were expected to purchase their own side arms. The Nambu Type A Modified pistol was adopted by the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1909 and the Thai Army in the 1920s.
Most of the Type A Modified and Type B Nambu pistols were produced by
the Tokyo Arsenal with a few pistols being produced by the Tokyo Gas and Electric Company. The Type 14 Nambu was produced by the Nagoya Arsenal in either Nagoya's Atsuta or Toriimatsu factories.
The Nambu pistol series withdraw the magazine from the left side of
the pistol by pressing the magazine release button on the left side of
the magazine. The magazine case is loaded by hand, and there is no charger clip for loading. The A Nambus and the Type 14 Nambu have 8-round magazines while the Type B Nambu has a 7-round magazine.
The Nambu pistol series is a recoil operated, locked breech, semi-automatic pistol. The pistols are slender barreled with a single piece frame. The barrel is forged integrally with the receiver.[1] The breech-lock was achieved by a propping system similar to the breech lock system used in the Glisenti Model 1910.
As the barrel moved forward, the block would be lifted as it rode
across the frame forcing the lug upward to lock into the bolt. The Nambu series is well balanced despite the main spring chamber protruding from the left side.
The Nambu pistol uses a low pressure 8 mm cartridge, which is considerably less powerful than comparable Western rounds like the .45 ACP, the 7.62x25mm Tokarev, the .455 Webley, and the 9x19mm Parabellum. The safety catch on the Type A requires both hands to operate; it was omitted entirely from the Type 14.
The "Type 14 Nambu" was designed in 1925 with the goal of simplifying manufacturing to reduce cost. It was officially adopted for issue to non-commissioned officers in the Japanese Army in 1927 and was available for purchase by officers. The Type 14 was an improved version of the Type A Modified Nambu. As many as 400,000 Type 14s were possibly produced. Most Type 14s are marked with the month and year of production according to the year of Emperor Hirohito with his reign name abbreviated Sho from Showa left of the stamped date.
Later production models are distinguished by an enlarged, oblong
trigger guard (which was introduced after Japanese soldiers reported
difficulty in accessing the trigger while wearing gloves in Manchuria)
and sometimes have a knurled steel cocking knob instead of the standard
"slotted" cocking knob. An auxiliary magazine spring was added from mid-1940 to retain the magazine and aid the magazine follower. The safety is a lever on the left side and locks the barrel and barrel extension as well as stopping the sear from moving. A redesigned cocking knob was implemented in 1944 in order to simplify production. The Type 14 also lacks the grip safety used on the previous models. The Type 14 could be equipped with the Type 90 tear gas grenade with use of a special attachment.
Pre-World War II Type 14s are well made, with quality dropping during wartime. Machining marks, a lack of polishing, and thin bluing became more common as wartime shortages affected quality. The later Type 14s remained quite functional despite the decreased quality.
Holster quality for the Type 14 also degraded as the shortages of
critical raw materials forced a change from a leather holster to
rubberized canvas.
One quality of the Type 14 caught the eye of William B. Ruger who had acquired a captured Nambu from a returning U.S. Marine in 1945. Ruger duplicated two Nambus in his garage,
and although he decided against marketing them, the handgun's rear
cocking device and the Nambu's silhouette were incorporated into the
Ruger .22 semi-automatic pistol series, when in 1949 the Ruger Standard (and later Mark I, II, and III) pistols were sold to the American public.
3 comments:
It's funny.
Japan has been making (good) just about everything, but good firearms they not can make
I found it's interior design to be very simple though. Fewer things to go wrong I would think.
these rifles imported to Finland encrypts the arisaka rifles in 1905, at the time when the Finnish was still a Russian-for large the prince of the municipality.
Weapons used Finland in civil war from 1917 to 1918.
(russo - japan war it was 1905)
Later, also today, rifles used the elk (moose) hunting (rifle 8.2 mm bullet arisaka)
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