Polish Tokarev

Erich

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Years ago when I was in law school, I bought a Norinco Type 213 Tokarev. This was the one made with the smaller gripframe, designed especially for the 9x19 cartridge. I didn't need the gun, but at around $100, it was too good to pass up (I traded a used Beretta 950 BS .25 straight across for it - I had two of those). I wound up using it a fair amount, as a car gun. I lived in a pretty bad area at the time, and I'd take it out of my car and bring it up to my well-secured apartment every night. I loaded it with IMI's UZI-brand black-tip carbine rounds - I recall that these 115-gr FMJs chrono'd in the mid-1200 fps range from the Tok.

The gun was fun to shoot. It wasn't super-accurate, had a creepy trigger, but it worked and worked and worked. In my many dealings with the shady side of life at the time (I was working as a private investigator for a criminal defense attorney at the time, and I was - as I mentioned - living in a bad part of town), I had occasion to bring the gun into sight at least three times that I can quickly recall - and I actually racked a bullet into the chamber and aimed it on one of them. As I said, it worked, worked, worked, and I relied on it (NM at the time had no legal way to carry concealed - remedied now, so I often found myself falling back on the decent-sized and -calibered car gun instead of a carry gun when things got weird).

Anyway, after a time I was a lawyer and I was moving to a different town and a friend asked to buy the Tokarev. I sold it to him for cheap, but I missed it soon afterward. Something about the way the skinny thing felt. When I eventually asked my friend if I could buy it back, he told me that his crazy mother had been visiting, and he had destroyed the gun :eek: out of fear that she would hurt herself or someone else with it (Dude! Why not just leave it at the office! :confused:)

Well, years later when I was at the tail end of my milsurp madness, I saw that SOG was importing Polish Tokarevs to the USA. The Circle-11 mark confirmed that these were made at the famous Radom factory - anyone familiar with Polish weapons knows that they're are of top-notch quality (the P-64 possibly excluded - jury's still out on that). I missed the slender bastard child of John Moses Browning, and snagged one for $129. Here are some pictures.

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It came with a goofy import-rules-required safety, of course, but a better-designed on than that on the Norincos I'd seen. The Chinese (and some Russkis) Tokarevs put a crude safety on the frame to the rear of the left grip for American import - don't know whether they do so for the guns they send to your lovely Home and Native Land. The Poles made a somewhat less crude safety (strictly trigger-blocking, nothing you'd want to rely on) and put it in front of the left grip. (The Romanian Toks that have been imported to the State for the last couple of years use the Polish system as well.) They had to modify the grip for this, and they put a stupid thumbrest on the left grip for additional US import points ("It's a target gun - yeah, that's the ticket!" :jerkit:) I'm a lefty, so the thumbrest got in the way of my enjoyment of the gun. I wrote to Poland and had a fellow send me some original grips. I broke the right hand side installing it, but the LH grip is now as it should be - no thumbrest.

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The safety got in the way of my trigger finger as well, so I removed it. A friend introduced me to a good machinist who made me a part that would block the hole in the frame where the safety had been. I blued it and installed it, and am happy as a clam with how the gun has turned out.

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The Polish Tokarev may be my most fun gun to shoot. It has enough recoil to let you know that you've launched something of consequence, but the fast-moving 86-grain pill imparts so pleasant a little push that a child would enjoy it. There's a satisfying CRACK! that gets the attention of onlookers, and the bottlenecked rounds never jam. The trigger on the Pole is pretty nice, too - I helped it out with some strategically placed dollops of Militec TW-25B. One thing that strikes me as negative on the Polska Tok is that it seems to want to rust . . . even down here in the high desert! I wax mine after I clean it, and it seems to do okay. I've thought about having my gunsmith friend hard-chrome it, but I'm not sure that it would look right.

It gives nice velocities. The easily found S&B 86-gr FMJ (also marketed as Winchester USA ammo for slightly more money) does an average of 1531 fps out of this slender pistola. Romanian surplus ammo does 1516. I have some neat Yugo stuff on which . . . gee . . . . the bullets are attracted to magnets. I'll bet that's a decent penetrator!

Anyway, I have carried it on hikes in the mountains, I've carried it (nothing in the chamber, full mag) around town - its slim profile makes it easy IWB, but I don't usually carry it. I just like to have it and to occasionally bring it out to the range to play. Anyone else have Toks that they like?

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See Marstar (sponsor), Norinco T33, no safety, 2 mags., solid as a rock, swap barrel to make it 9mm, about $180.00 CAN.. P&S and Tradex have, as new, Russians, again no safety, with holster, cleaning rod, extra mag., etc. $250.00 CAN. I have both (Chinees and Rooshki) in 7.62x25. Love both and can't see a great difference in the quality of the two_One is new, other is early 1940's
Pete
 
I don't have one, always wanted, never gotten around to it. If I did it would be a Soviet, but I like that Pole too. Its not about the cost or anything :p just always seems to be something else coming up.

I quite like your Polish Erich, very nice, solid and well blued! Thanks for the pics and the good write-up
 
are there any polish ones in canada? i know there are russian, chinese, hungarian, and yugos. some with the crappy safety, some without.
 
I've got a Chinese (not really Norinco) Tok, manufactured in 1966. It has Chinese characters engraved across the top of the slide, and no safety. They're really quite an elegant design, with the lift out hammer/sear unit. I'll see if I can get some pics up tomorrow. Ammo here is mostly Czech mil spec, at $250 per case it's like shooting rimfire for cost.
 
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Just sold the ChiCom, but will never sell my Soviet TT33. It's such a sweet little pistol to shoot, groups well too. Not to mention the cool factor of having CCCP on the handgrips.
 
I have a "seasoned" yugoslavian Crvena Zastava mod 60 in 9mm I got in a trade. It is struck with the Yugoslavian coat of arms on the top of the slide near the rear sight so it might be military issue but it also has a safety lever located at the upper rear of the left grip (very easy to flip with the side of the thumb).
It also incorporates a magazine safety.
I would like to know if the regular TT-33 or variant magazines would fit on this one; it looks pretty standard to me.
PP.
 
I have a "seasoned" yugoslavian Crvena Zastava mod 60 in 9mm I got in a trade. It is struck with the Yugoslavian coat of arms on the top of the slide near the rear sight so it might be military issue but it also has a safety lever located at the upper rear of the left grip (very easy to flip with the side of the thumb).
It also incorporates a magazine safety.
I would like to know if the regular TT-33 or variant magazines would fit on this one; it looks pretty standard to me.
PP.


I'm pretty curious too about which mags will fit which models.
 
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