Walther P22

Walther P22

Walther P22
Type Semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin Germany
Service history
Used by See Users
Production history
Manufacturer Carl Walther GmbH
Produced 2002-present
Variants P22 Target
P22 CA
Specifications
Weight 430 g (15 oz) (P22)
525 g (18.5 oz) (P22 Target)
Length 159 mm (6.3 in)
Barrel length 87 mm (3.4 in) (P22)
127 mm (5.0 in) (P22 Target)

Cartridge .22 LR
Action Blowback
Feed system 10-round detachable box magazine
Sights Adjustable open sights

The P22 is a semi-automatic pistol chambered for .22 LR rimfire ammunition, manufactured by Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen. It was introduced in 2002. Walther recommends the use of high velocity ammunition for proper cycling. The P22 is equipped with a magazine disconnect that prevents the trigger from operating unless a magazine is actually inserted and locked into the weapon. It resembles the Walther P99 but it is somewhat smaller.

Design details

On the exterior, it resembles the Walther P99, but it is somewhat smaller (75% of the P99's size) and its action chambers the rimfire .22 LR cartridge. The most noticeable exterior difference is the P22's slide mounted, thumb operated, ambidextrous safety and its external hammer. The P22 features a cast polymer grip-frame. Its slide and serial numbered frame receiver inserts are made from MIM (Metal Injection Molding) cast zinc alloy, its barrel consists of a rifled steel insert within a steel barrel sleeve, and its internal lockwork and fire-control parts are a combination of MIM cast steel and steel stampings.

The P22 can be purchased with a 3.4-inch short barrel (pictured to the right), or with a 5-inch barrel which includes a barrel mounted weight compensator matching the profile of the slide. All P22's except the P22 CA come with an internally threaded barrel which allows the attachment of a sound suppressor or silencer with a separate thread adapter available from Walther. The P22 CA variant specifically excludes this capability to comply with California law.

The P22 is offered in many different color variations of its polymer lower receiver. The pistol is available in black, olive drab, grey, carbon fiber and 3 pink versions.[1] Additionally, the Walther P22 comes in a variety of camouflage options (e.g. pink "digi-cam" and leaf camo). There is now a new lower receiver finish that looks like Damascus steel. The slide assembly will have either a blue-black applied finish or it will be finished with a nickel/stainless look. Along with the new finish for the lower receiver, the slide also has a new finish option of brushed stainless.

The production year is located on the receiver and is visible through the ejection port when the slide is closed. The year is indicated with a two letter code where A=0, B=1, C=2 and so on to I=8 and K=9 ("J" is never used as a year designator). In the image you can see the receiver is labeled with AH indicating a production year of '07. Walther P22's produced for the US market have a different serial number range.

Operation

The threaded barrel of the P22 simplifies the attachment of certain accessories, such as this GEMTECH suppressor

The P22 may be fired double action at about 11 pounds of force, and operates as a single action with slightly more than 4 pounds of force.[2] The P22 operates by blowback where pressure generated by a firing cartridge is countered by a combination of the inertial weight of the slide assembly and the force of the recoil spring. The action will not open until the projectile has left the barrel and the pressures have dropped to safe levels.

The P22 is equipped with a magazine disconnect that prevents the trigger from operating on the sear mechanism unless a magazine is actually inserted and locked into the weapon.[2] The magazine disconnect on a P22 works by using a strong spring to apply downward force against the trigger bar, such force being sufficient to overcome the action of the relatively weaker trigger spring which interacts with upward force on the same bar. When a magazine is not locked into the weapon, the downward force of the stronger magazine disconnect spring causes the trigger bar to pass beneath the internal lockwork of the weapon when the trigger is pressed. Once a magazine is fully inserted, however, an actuator surface on the front of the magazine pushes against the magazine safety. This overcomes the magazine safety's strong spring, and thereby serves to allow the trigger bar to spring upward under the force of the less powerful trigger spring. When this occurs, the trigger bar is in a position where it engages the lockwork when the trigger is actuated.

Walther recommends the use of high velocity ammunition (e.g. CCI Mini Mag round nose coated lead).[3] The gun will not cycle efficiently unless high velocity .22 rounds are used.

The P22's slide mounted safety, when engaged, performs two functions. First, it serves as a "hammer block" by rotating a portion of the metal surface of the safety into a position that interferes with the hammer's contact with the firing pin. Second, it acts as a "firing pin lock" by rotating a portion of the safety into a notch on the underside of the firing pin, thereby inhibiting forward movement. The P22 safety does not prevent sear or trigger movement, and (as noted), it does not provide a hammer-drop function. If the hammer is cocked when a P22 has been placed on "safe," the hammer will continue to remain cocked and will fall only if the trigger is pressed. If the safety is on, the hammer will strike the safety instead of the firing pin and, therefore, fail to fire.[3]

The P22 uses an additional, passive, safety mechanism to protect against accidental discharges in the event the weapon is dropped. When the action is closed, a small metal button on the underside of the breech block is actuated by an arm surface extending from the sear. In this state (whether or not the hammer is cocked), the firing pin is mechanically blocked and cannot move forward to strike a cartridge rim. When the trigger is pressed, the sear moves downward in such a way as to move from its interaction with the firing pin safety, which in turn springs downward under the force of a captive spring within the breech block. This disengages the firing pin safety, allowing the firing pin to move and the weapon to fire.[3]

Users

See also

References

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