I'm starting to think that if anyone goes for a PPK it should be in this caliber as .32 is probably what the PPK was designed for and the PP was far better suited for .380 as its got a 4 inch barrel
and its been noted for awhile that with anything less that a 3.75 inch barrel .380's can have feeding trouble, atleast the old steel ones can because of the angle of feeding ramp and the fact that they had a the locked in place barrel while modern guns like the glock have a tip up barrel that angles the barrel more in line with the cartridges when the slide racks back to load another one after the first one is shot and even after that you have to have just the right power springs to get it to work properly.
mind you I am using 1911 logic here but it seems to fit in with the PPK design perfectly and explains why they have such a checkered reputation with .380
plus the london police were using PP's in .380 in 62' as that's what bond was actually using in the first film as that's all they could get their hands on at the time and that's where the production studio was located.
which could mean that the one that that bodyguard was using to guard princess ann was also in .380 however from the sound of it he might have been carrying it without one in the chamber and it jammed when he tried to rack the slide because someone bumped into him as he was noted as not blaming the gun for the incident.
and also just as a sidenote Bond in the books was given a smith centenal for long distance work in addtion to the PPK in Dr. No.
so he was to have two guns, the .32 acp PPK as his everyday carry piece and a .38 special J frame probably as his replacement for the .45 revolver he had in the previous books in addtion to the beretta .25 that the PPK replaced although it was lost on the island and never replaced in the books and there was never a note of what happened to the the .45 that I presumed was a .45 New Serivce Revolver in the books past that either.
anyways Frank46 what did you pay for the Manhurin PPK there and when was it made? I've been thinking of getting one as there regarded as being on par with the walther made walthers unlike the interarms and smith ones and it might be possibile to bring one into MA under the C and R laws.
and it wont cost me an arm and a leg like the geniune walthers do.
Yours was an interesting post. I exchanged letters with the real Geoffrey Boothroyd, whose book, "The Handgun" is still perhaps the best single primer in its field.
Boothroyd told me that Ian Fleming got the Centennial .38 that he had suggested as Bond's carry gun confused with the S&W M-27 that Geoff suggested to replace the Colt New Service .45 with 5.5-inch barrel that Bond carried in his car. (Fleming was shown in, "Life" pointing this gun,one of his own. His Ruger MK 1 .22 was also pictured in that article.)
Fleming liked small autos, so he armed Bond with the PPK to replace the puny .25 Beretta. I don't know if he ever bought a PPK. He did buy a Centennial on a visit to New York, and some paperback covers showed him with it on the back cover. He had by then, of course, sorted out the S&W models.
The PPK carried by the bodyguard to the Royals who were attacked had a 7.65mm gun. I don't know why it jammed. But a friend of mine who was a college dean once talked with the bodyguard to a Prime Minister giving a speech on his campus in Texas. He was armed with a snub S&W M-36 and standard old RN lead bullets. My pal gave him some lead HP Plus P's (the FBI load then), and the officer seemed very happy to get them.
British general officers and undercover personnel have been issued PP's, I think in part because of the glamor that Fleming's books generated for them. And RAF pilots were issued PPK's in lieu of their Browning 9mm's by the time of the last Gulf War. Many objected, but the PC policy makers insisted. I think other NATO pilots were also issued with PPK's.
Of course, they were very popular with German aircrew in WW II, because they were smaller and handier than the Luger or P-38. And the holster was less likely to hang up on the cockpit. The ME-109, in particular, had a small cockpit.
I read a story in a gun magazine by a German who said that the PP in German police service tended to jam maybe 1 shot in 50. That was one reason why German police agencies went to modern 9mm's. The Walthers seem to vary. Some work fine; others jam more.