Showing posts with label Beretta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beretta. Show all posts

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Pair of subcompact 9mms provide hi-capacity pocket power

Paul Heliniski at GunsAmerica Forums thinks like me, which makes him practically a genius when it comes to carry guns. He writes he used to feel comfortable carrying a 5-shot S&W .38 Special snubby and then Katrina, 9/11 and other disastrous events in life changed his thinking.

Now he prefers small subcompact pistols that will shoot more than five times and he reviews his top two picks. I don't own either of these, but hope that either or both are in my future.
The Beretta Px4 Subcompact and the Springfield Armory XD9 Subcompact both come in just under two pounds fully loaded with (count em) 14 rounds of 9mm. They represent what I feel is the next generation of pocket pistol. Both are manageable weight for front pocket carry if you wear a belt, and with a pocket holster they both draw smoothly, with no snags.
Here's a couple of videos he made shooting both these pocket pistols, the Beretta PX4 9mm SC:



And here's the Springfield XD9 Subcompact:

Sunday, January 31, 2010

No, it ain't an M1A SOCOM, it's an Italian Garand, Beretta BM-62

We have a very rare bird in the gun shop where I work, Village Pawn & Gun Shop of fabulous downtown Wadesboro, NC.

I've been working there for a year and only last week did I finally convince the family owners to let me put this rare bird on gunbroker for sale.

As the daddy rabbit of the family gun shop business often says, they just ain't tired of looking at it yet. But if somebody is willing to pony up a mere $3,500, plus shipping, plus credit card fee, now they can have it to look at.

What is it? We get asked that a lot in the gun shop when folks see it in the fancy revolving glass case where it resides. No, it's not a Springfield M1A SOCOM, no it's not an M1 Garand tanker, no it's not a shorty tanker version of the M14. But yes, it's all of the above and yet none of them.

It's the Italian Garand, which was made by Beretta for military issue for the Italian Army after World War II.

The Firearm Blog has a post about it.

The Italian Garand: Beretta BM59

The Italian army adopted the Beretta BM59, basically an M1 Garand chambered for 7.62×51mm NATO capable of select fire. It was about as successful as all the other select fire battle rifles adopted around the world (not very). From Wikipedia:

After World War II, Italy adopted the US-designed M1 Garand rifle in .30-06 (7.62×63mm) and also manufactured it under license. This semi-automatic rifle proved itself well during WWII, but in the late 1950s it was considered outdated and obsolete. The Italian military wanted a new rifle chambered for the NATO-standard 7.62×51mm.

Beretta designed the BM59, which was essentially a rechambered M1 fitted with a removable 20-round magazine, folding bipod and flash suppressor/grenade launcher. The BM59 is capable of selective fire.

Our Italian Garand isn't a BM59, it's a BM62, which is the civilian version Beretta made which is only semi-automatic, not selective fire semi- or fully auto like the military BM59.

Here's what BlueBook says about the Italian Garand:

BlueBook on BERETTA : RIFLES: SEMI-AUTO, RECENT MFG.
BM-59 M-1 GARAND
- with original Beretta M1 receiver, only 200 imported into the U.S.

BM-62
- similar to BM-59, except has flash suppressor and is Italian marked.

BlueBook don't say how many BM62s were imported, probably very few we're guessing. One of the commenters on The Firearm Blog said the only one he'd ever heard of was owned by Jeff Cooper, the gunner's guru who started Gunsite firearms training academy and was a leading expert on all things related to modern firearms.

Saying Jeff Cooper owned one is sorta like saying God owns one. God probably has the only armory that's bigger than the late Marine Col. Jeff Cooper's firearms collection.