Could be I guess, but i bought one anyway. I've wanted one ever since I read about them as a kid, and saw it for the first time at the Italian gun store in Vancouver in the early 80s. It totally stood out in the display cabinet ("one of these things is not like the others").
I have to say that I really like it, but I admit that has as much to do with the heritage of the gun than anything else. Developed as a cold war "bug out" gun or for 2nd tier resistance in case the communists invaded, was the first polymer frame pistol, had a very high capacity mag for the time (18), simple striker fired design with only a few moving parts so very reliable, originally in a selective fire military variant with the shoulder stock (capable of 3 round bursts at 2200 rnds/sec). Too many compromises so never adopted by Military markets. Sold as a civilian version for years but with the heavy DA trigger, not great as either a range gun or defensive gun compared to other pistols avail. Regardless, I think it is a very cool gun.
For sure the trigger takes effort. The take-up is long, but smooth and predictable. Tripping the firing pin is definitely a heavy 'clunk' though. I'm going to swap out the firing pin spring to see if it makes a difference, but if it doesn't, oh well, this is a collector i'll use for plinking, not target work.
You have to respect the 70s and 80s vintage HKs. Even though they didn't survive because they were either too compromised like the VP70, or too expensive to build,
like the P9s and P7s, they are all unique and ground breaking.
here is a clip of the military 3 round burst version (VP70M).
I have to say that I really like it, but I admit that has as much to do with the heritage of the gun than anything else. Developed as a cold war "bug out" gun or for 2nd tier resistance in case the communists invaded, was the first polymer frame pistol, had a very high capacity mag for the time (18), simple striker fired design with only a few moving parts so very reliable, originally in a selective fire military variant with the shoulder stock (capable of 3 round bursts at 2200 rnds/sec). Too many compromises so never adopted by Military markets. Sold as a civilian version for years but with the heavy DA trigger, not great as either a range gun or defensive gun compared to other pistols avail. Regardless, I think it is a very cool gun.
For sure the trigger takes effort. The take-up is long, but smooth and predictable. Tripping the firing pin is definitely a heavy 'clunk' though. I'm going to swap out the firing pin spring to see if it makes a difference, but if it doesn't, oh well, this is a collector i'll use for plinking, not target work.
You have to respect the 70s and 80s vintage HKs. Even though they didn't survive because they were either too compromised like the VP70, or too expensive to build,
like the P9s and P7s, they are all unique and ground breaking.

here is a clip of the military 3 round burst version (VP70M).
Last edited: