Was that at 800 Slater’s Lane? Not sure how familiar you are with Alexandria, but I grew up in NoVa, and that address pops up on a Google search. That might be where I bought it.
From the ad I found below, the (fake) MP40 was $1xx, which was a lot of money for a high school kid.
The problem is I've been away from there for 45 years. That address sounds familiar, but it has been too long.
I put a total of 10 rounds through the Walther yesterday.
I used Blazer Brass 124, the closest I had to the German Wermacht Ammunition, based on sources I've been able to locate (*). I shot the 10 rounds in two groups of five.
In the first group, I loaded and shot 1 round, just to make sure nothing weird happened. Then I loaded 2 rounds, twice. On the second round of both 2 round mags, the slide failed to lock back on an empty mag. On the second group, I loaded 5 rounds. The first three rounds fed fine, then the last two rounds malfunctioned with a failure to feed stoppage. The bullet stopped in the feedway. I cleared the stoppage and cycled the action, then chambered and shot normally.
All shots were taken SA. I used a top of sight hold and put the blade in the notch. The first target grouped about 4" at 7 yards. This second group was better, except for the last round which I yanked right, the one at 3 o'clock. (remember I am a lefty).
Pondering the malfunctions (2xFTLB and 2xFTF), perhaps they might be due to the magazine spring? Maybe the spring is not pushing up on the follower with enough enthusiasm. As this is not a "shooter" grade firearm, I wouldn't do anything about it, unless the owner wanted to re-spring the magazine.
It certainly shoots well, as well as I can shoot a modern firearm, for sure. I could move my hold to the bottom of X and probably print groups in 1" squares at 7 yards SA, very good for me. Recoil was mild, as you might expect with a steel framed duty pistol using mild 9mm ammo. All of the functions checked good; safety, decocker, etc. It all works.
I'll be returning the gun to its owner. It was nice to put an old warhorse through it's paces; not bad for a gun that's 80 years old.
(*) Comparison of German Army small arms ammunition muzzle velocity and bullet weight with Blazer Brass 124, below. German Army 8g bullet at 1,083 fps compares well with the Blazer 1,090 fps, and the bullet weight of 8 grams or 123 grains equates to 124 gr ammunition. I'll defer to @P30 since my German is a little rusty, but I put what I believe are the correct translation of the terms below:
German Army Ammunition:
“Anfangsgeschwindigkeit” (muzzle velocity?) 330 m/s (converts to 1,083 fps)
“Geschossgewicht” (bullet weight?) 8g (converts to 123 grains)
Source:
http://gigconceptsinc.com/German-9mmP-Perf.html
Blazer Brass Ammunition:
Blazer 124, MPN 5201, UPC 76683052018
Bullet Type: Full Metal Jacket
Muzzle Velocity 1090 fps
Muzzle Energy 327 ft lbs
Source:
https://www.targetsportsusa.com/cci-...01-p-4172.aspx
Last edited by RJ; 04-20-2021 at 05:52 AM.