Post by XavierBreath on Mar 30, 2004 14:24:21 GMT -5
Ever have a pistol catch your eye just because it was so damned ugly? That is what the Tokarev TT33 did to me. The Tok has to be one of the homliest pistols ever made. The Tula Tokarev is a short recoil operated, locked breech pistol. It uses the Browning swinging link system, borrowed from the Colt 1911 pistol, modified with barrel lugs cut on a lathe to simplify production. The single action trigger has no safeties, other than disconnector to prevent out-of-battery fire, and a half-cock notch on the hammer. Recently US imported Toks have a retrofitted manual safety either in front of, or behind the left grip. These safeties are third world Bubba stuff. Don't trust them. The only safe way to carry a TT is with an empty chamber. The hammer/sear assembly was cleverly made as a single unit, easily detachable for cleaning and maintenance. The magazine holds 8 cartridges. Intrestingly, the feed lips are on the detachable hammer/sear assembly, making even banged up magazines serviceable. Fixed sights were factory zeroed for 25 meters. The pistol uses a bottlenecked 7.62X25 cartridge. This is a very hot round, reported to fit somewhere between .357 and .44 magnum in power. It was designed to penetrate thick coats in Siberia.
I got my chance at a Tokarev TT33 when SOG advertised Polish models for $129. These were listed as good to very good condition. They came with one magazine. I placed my order late, when SOG only had three left in stock. I did not pay for handpicking.
My pistol arrived two days later wrapped in newspaper in a cardboard box. It had the retrofitted safety in front of the left grip, and soft plastic grips with a thumbrest to ease importation restrictions. It had a miniscule IAI import mark on the left of the dustcover. The condition was apparently unissued. There was no bluing wear, although it did have a small amount of freckling. It still had cosmoline all through it. It had the Circle 11 Radom factory proof, along with a 1952 date on the top of the slide. All numbers matched. Fit and finish was similar to a Makarov. For $129 it was a very pretty ugly gun. I took the gun home, detailed it and lubed it up.
Later at the range I bought 100 rounds of Winchester 7.62X25 ammo and 50 rounds of Sellier & Bellot. Ammo was $11 and $9 per box respectively. Both had 85 grain bullets. Surplus stuff may be cheaper at a gunshow, but some extremely hot 7.62X25 surplus ammo is out there that a Tokarev shooter must be aware of. More info concerning this dangerous ammo can be found here. www.geocities.com/Yosemite/Gorge/4653/bad.htm
Nine milimeter Parabellum barrels and magazines are available for the TT33. Fitting these would allow the use of less expensive ammunition.
The Tokarev pistol shot well, but required a firm grip to prevent stovepipes initially. This cleared up after the first 50 rounds. I had one failure to extract in which the primer was blown off the cartridge. I had to rod that shellcasing out of the chamber. It was intact. I cleaned the chamber and continued shooting. I was surprised at the Tokarev's accuracy. The hot cartridge, long sight radius and tall sights combined to make an accurate pistol. It shot easy two inch groups at 25 feet. The trigger was crisp with about 6 pounds of pull. It had no creep. If I concentrated on my trigger work, I could bring the groups down to an inch and a half. The rear of the magazine did chew my hand a bit on recoil. Recoil was straight back, or so it seemed. The muzzle flash was an attention getter.
I did not like the cheap plastic import grips, so I ordered some proper commie grips from Numrich. Those grips arrived without the pivoting metal clips that hold them on. I spent an evening making new metal clips out of a poutty knife blade and riveting them to the grips. After a bit of fitting, I had commie grips.
While cleaning the pistol, I lost the detent ball for the safety. The pistol was designed without a safety, and relying on the make shift safety it posessed was a bad idea in my opinion. I pinned it in place. Removal of the safety would have resulted in a hole in the frame.
The Tokarev TT33 is not really useful as a modern weapon. It's only redeeming value is that of a curiosity. As the sidearm of our enemies during the Cold War it has some historical interest. It is an unusual interpretation of Browning's design. For the person who enjoys collecting as well as shooting handguns, these are reasons enough to own the Tokarev. If you are wanting an inexpensive and reliable shooter, the Makarov may serve you better.
History:
The Tokarev TT ("Tula, Tokarev") pistol was developed as a result of continuous trials, held by the Red Army in the late 1920s. The Soviet Army was looking for a new, modern semiautomatic pistol to replace the obsolete Nagant M1895 revolvers and a variety of foreign semi-automatic pistols. The Soviets tested several pistols of various designers, and in 1930 eventually selected the design of the famous Russian arms designer, Fedor Tokarev. During 1930 - 1932 the Red Army procured several thousand new pistols, and after initial field trials requested several improvements. Those resulted in the adoption of the model 1933 Tokarev pistol early in 1934. This pistol was manufactured in increased numbers prior to the Great Patriotic War. Before July 22, 1941, about 600 000 TT-33 pistols were delivered to the Red Army. During the war pistols were made in increasing numbers. In 1946 the TT was slightly modified to cut production costs, and its manufacture in Russia finally ceased circa 1952, with the adoption of the more modern 9mm Makarov PM pistol. However, the TT33 served with the Soviet Army well until 1960s, and with the Soviet Militia (Police) - until 1970s. During the late 1940s and 1950s Russia supplied some countries within the Warsaw Pact with licenses to manufacture the Tokarev TT33. It was produced in China, Hungary, North Korea, Poland, Romania and Yugoslavia, in more or less original forms. Most military TT pistols of non-Soviet manufacture were also in 7.62mm, with some commercial export versions available in 9x19mm Luger.
Disassembly instructions with photos
www.alpharubicon.com/leo/tokarev213.htm
I got my chance at a Tokarev TT33 when SOG advertised Polish models for $129. These were listed as good to very good condition. They came with one magazine. I placed my order late, when SOG only had three left in stock. I did not pay for handpicking.
My pistol arrived two days later wrapped in newspaper in a cardboard box. It had the retrofitted safety in front of the left grip, and soft plastic grips with a thumbrest to ease importation restrictions. It had a miniscule IAI import mark on the left of the dustcover. The condition was apparently unissued. There was no bluing wear, although it did have a small amount of freckling. It still had cosmoline all through it. It had the Circle 11 Radom factory proof, along with a 1952 date on the top of the slide. All numbers matched. Fit and finish was similar to a Makarov. For $129 it was a very pretty ugly gun. I took the gun home, detailed it and lubed it up.
Later at the range I bought 100 rounds of Winchester 7.62X25 ammo and 50 rounds of Sellier & Bellot. Ammo was $11 and $9 per box respectively. Both had 85 grain bullets. Surplus stuff may be cheaper at a gunshow, but some extremely hot 7.62X25 surplus ammo is out there that a Tokarev shooter must be aware of. More info concerning this dangerous ammo can be found here. www.geocities.com/Yosemite/Gorge/4653/bad.htm
Nine milimeter Parabellum barrels and magazines are available for the TT33. Fitting these would allow the use of less expensive ammunition.
The Tokarev pistol shot well, but required a firm grip to prevent stovepipes initially. This cleared up after the first 50 rounds. I had one failure to extract in which the primer was blown off the cartridge. I had to rod that shellcasing out of the chamber. It was intact. I cleaned the chamber and continued shooting. I was surprised at the Tokarev's accuracy. The hot cartridge, long sight radius and tall sights combined to make an accurate pistol. It shot easy two inch groups at 25 feet. The trigger was crisp with about 6 pounds of pull. It had no creep. If I concentrated on my trigger work, I could bring the groups down to an inch and a half. The rear of the magazine did chew my hand a bit on recoil. Recoil was straight back, or so it seemed. The muzzle flash was an attention getter.
I did not like the cheap plastic import grips, so I ordered some proper commie grips from Numrich. Those grips arrived without the pivoting metal clips that hold them on. I spent an evening making new metal clips out of a poutty knife blade and riveting them to the grips. After a bit of fitting, I had commie grips.
While cleaning the pistol, I lost the detent ball for the safety. The pistol was designed without a safety, and relying on the make shift safety it posessed was a bad idea in my opinion. I pinned it in place. Removal of the safety would have resulted in a hole in the frame.
The Tokarev TT33 is not really useful as a modern weapon. It's only redeeming value is that of a curiosity. As the sidearm of our enemies during the Cold War it has some historical interest. It is an unusual interpretation of Browning's design. For the person who enjoys collecting as well as shooting handguns, these are reasons enough to own the Tokarev. If you are wanting an inexpensive and reliable shooter, the Makarov may serve you better.
History:
The Tokarev TT ("Tula, Tokarev") pistol was developed as a result of continuous trials, held by the Red Army in the late 1920s. The Soviet Army was looking for a new, modern semiautomatic pistol to replace the obsolete Nagant M1895 revolvers and a variety of foreign semi-automatic pistols. The Soviets tested several pistols of various designers, and in 1930 eventually selected the design of the famous Russian arms designer, Fedor Tokarev. During 1930 - 1932 the Red Army procured several thousand new pistols, and after initial field trials requested several improvements. Those resulted in the adoption of the model 1933 Tokarev pistol early in 1934. This pistol was manufactured in increased numbers prior to the Great Patriotic War. Before July 22, 1941, about 600 000 TT-33 pistols were delivered to the Red Army. During the war pistols were made in increasing numbers. In 1946 the TT was slightly modified to cut production costs, and its manufacture in Russia finally ceased circa 1952, with the adoption of the more modern 9mm Makarov PM pistol. However, the TT33 served with the Soviet Army well until 1960s, and with the Soviet Militia (Police) - until 1970s. During the late 1940s and 1950s Russia supplied some countries within the Warsaw Pact with licenses to manufacture the Tokarev TT33. It was produced in China, Hungary, North Korea, Poland, Romania and Yugoslavia, in more or less original forms. Most military TT pistols of non-Soviet manufacture were also in 7.62mm, with some commercial export versions available in 9x19mm Luger.
Disassembly instructions with photos
www.alpharubicon.com/leo/tokarev213.htm