The Borchardt C-93. The first mass produced Semi Auto / Autoloader pistol. It fires the 7.65x25 cartridge (around .30 in inches). Its auto-loading mechanism was revolutionary, however it was an ergonomic mess due to its vertical, 90 degree grip angle and rear heavy feel due to its design. Georg Luger was tasked with fixing this issue, however the arrogant Hugo Borchardt get his design was impeccable and impossible to improve upon, so Georg Luger byed him and redesigned it entirely. The P08 Luger changed the design and location of the recoil spring to make it less bulky and more ergonomic, plus better weight distribution, changed the grip angle, and shortened the ammunition to make the grip even more ergonomic. This cartridge was 7.65x21 Parabellum, however later when more stopping power was requested, the 9mm cartridge was born. Basically the Borchardt C-93 was the rough draft, the P08 Luger was the final.
Real life Borchardt C-93 compared to the Borchardt C-93 in the Red Dead Redemption games (example is RDR2). In game features a different grip angle, trigger guard design and trigger shoe design, among different tweaks.
The Glock 46. The one Glock (excluding the 44) that doesn’t share the same internal mechanisms as the others. It is a rotating barrel design, as you may have seen in guns like the Beretta Px4, GSH-18, and some 5.7x28 designs, such as the S&W M&P 5.7. It exists because German police requirements were for a gun that didn’t require a trigger pull to field strip, and a different trigger pull. The Glock 46 supposedly has a much longer trigger pull than usual. The rotating barrel, however, was apparently not required, and is unclear why Glock did that. It seems to field strip, this knob in the place of the backplate needs to be turned, and the magazine removed. Due to its unique takedown system, the usual Glock takedown levers are absent, leaving a smooth side. It seems to be the size of a Glock 19, with some photos showing extended magazines.
It seems, in picture 2, that the rear knob actually pulls the entire striker assembly out. Also the gun may actually be more Glock 19x/45 sized, explaining the extended mag being a black 19x 19 round magazine.
likely one of, if not THE first/earliest Glock prototypes. Notice how it looks nothing like current Glocks, indication this was more of a test, just throwing shit out there and seeing what works type of gun. Uses a takedown lever I am not familiar with, however the circular shape on the right side reminds me of P22X series SIG or S&W M&P. I can only seem to find two photos of this prototype (3 if you include the cropped and uncropped image of Katherine Glock holding it). Also notice how rough it looks around the takedown lever and beaver tail, further indication it being an early test prototype. Really the only thing similar to that of a modern Glock on it is the hooked shape of the trigger guard. I’m running out of ideas for this thread.
Glock 26c 1-of-1 prototype. The Glock 26 was invented because of the 1994 gay gun ban whatever it was called, banning magazines over 10 rounds. Glock’s whole thing was high capacity, so limiting to 10 rounds meant there was really no point to the extra size of the 17 and 19, at least to the people conceal carrying, so Glock created the 26. The 26c didn’t make it however because the compensating cuts caused jams and intense, blinding fireballs with the 3.6” barrel.
Gentlemen, today was the first time in my life I fired a gun. Even though we were in an open area, my ears were ringing. How do people fire these guns one after the other?
The Derya DY9 pistol is fine from what I hear. I just checked their shotguns, it seems they got rid of a lot of them. They were MUCH crazier a while back
John Moses Browning not only designed the M1911 handgun, but also the M2 50 caliber machine gun, the BAR automatic rifle, the 1887 lever action shotgun, the Auto 5 semi-auto shotgun, the Winchester 1894 lever action rifle
Photo of two Glock 19 Gen 1 prototypes. Apparently the story goes the Kansas Alcohol Beverage Control wanted smaller versions of the G17, but the didn’t want to wait for Glock’s Gen 2. Glock already had the compact 4” barrel slides made, but they were yet to finish the compact frame molds, so they just cut down G17 frames and hand finished them. Supposedly at their highest, only 56 of these prototypes existed, but since at the time, Glock only viewed them as a stopgap, a creation out of pure necessity, any G19 Gen 1 prototypes that were sent back to Glock after this period were destroyed. The only surviving ones were due to guns given to people or bought back by officers, resulting in only 20-25 examples existing today.
Only photos I can seem to find of the Glock 23 MHS. You may know of the 19MHS, which of course eventually evolved into the 19x (pretty much 45 aswell, just the black version). The 23 MHS is just the 19 MHS/X just in .40 S&W. The US military MHS trials to replace the XM9 trial’s Beretta M9 was open caliber, so Glock entered with both 9mm and .40 S&W. Supposedly they entered with the 17 MHS, 19 MHS, 22 MHS and 23 MHS, although the 17 and 22 MHS I cannot find photos of. I can only assume they follow the idea of the Glock 47 with a shortened frame to allow compact slides.
The Glock 17 is named after the patent number, not the magazine capacity nor caliber. It was Gaston Glock’s 17th patent. The Glock 45 is the 45th patent, and it neither holds 45 rounds nor is a .45 A
S&W Model 1917. Don’t know much of it, at least not to the extent with other guns below, but it’s pretty cool. A large frame revolver chambered for .45 A. Yes, .45 A, the auto cartridge originated in 1905 by JMB with the Colt Model 1905 (later evolved into the venerable 1911). The 1917 was created as basically a space filler. It was there to fill the absence of 1911’s during WW1. If you couldn’t get a 1911, you got a 1917. It used half moon clips to mimic the rim of a revolver cartridge so you could chamber the .45 A’s without them sinking into the cylinder and actually eject them via the clip. You may have seen the 1917 as War Daddy (Brad Pitt)’s revolver in Fury (2014). Pretty cool gun
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How you feel about the banana gun?
Peak Forum
The Borchardt C-93. The first mass produced Semi Auto / Autoloader pistol. It fires the 7.65x25 cartridge (around .30 in inches). Its auto-loading mechanism was revolutionary, however it was an ergonomic mess due to its vertical, 90 degree grip angle and rear heavy feel due to its design. Georg Luger was tasked with fixing this issue, however the arrogant Hugo Borchardt get his design was impeccable and impossible to improve upon, so Georg Luger byed him and redesigned it entirely. The P08 Luger changed the design and location of the recoil spring to make it less bulky and more ergonomic, plus better weight distribution, changed the grip angle, and shortened the ammunition to make the grip even more ergonomic. This cartridge was 7.65x21 Parabellum, however later when more stopping power was requested, the 9mm cartridge was born. Basically the Borchardt C-93 was the rough draft, the P08 Luger was the final.

Real life Borchardt C-93 compared to the Borchardt C-93 in the Red Dead Redemption games (example is RDR2). In game features a different grip angle, trigger guard design and trigger shoe design, among different tweaks.
List of every gun I own:
Spoiler
OH FUCK hey some more actually showed up I forgot I made this
Holy men forum bookmark dis rn
They should invent more casing-less guns like the ones the germans made. Those are really cool
The Glock 46. The one Glock (excluding the 44) that doesn’t share the same internal mechanisms as the others. It is a rotating barrel design, as you may have seen in guns like the Beretta Px4, GSH-18, and some 5.7x28 designs, such as the S&W M&P 5.7. It exists because German police requirements were for a gun that didn’t require a trigger pull to field strip, and a different trigger pull. The Glock 46 supposedly has a much longer trigger pull than usual. The rotating barrel, however, was apparently not required, and is unclear why Glock did that. It seems to field strip, this knob in the place of the backplate needs to be turned, and the magazine removed. Due to its unique takedown system, the usual Glock takedown levers are absent, leaving a smooth side. It seems to be the size of a Glock 19, with some photos showing extended magazines.

It seems, in picture 2, that the rear knob actually pulls the entire striker assembly out. Also the gun may actually be more Glock 19x/45 sized, explaining the extended mag being a black 19x 19 round magazine.
likely one of, if not THE first/earliest Glock prototypes. Notice how it looks nothing like current Glocks, indication this was more of a test, just throwing shit out there and seeing what works type of gun. Uses a takedown lever I am not familiar with, however the circular shape on the right side reminds me of P22X series SIG or S&W M&P. I can only seem to find two photos of this prototype (3 if you include the cropped and uncropped image of Katherine Glock holding it). Also notice how rough it looks around the takedown lever and beaver tail, further indication it being an early test prototype. Really the only thing similar to that of a modern Glock on it is the hooked shape of the trigger guard. I’m running out of ideas for this thread.
Glock 26c 1-of-1 prototype. The Glock 26 was invented because of the 1994 gay gun ban whatever it was called, banning magazines over 10 rounds. Glock’s whole thing was high capacity, so limiting to 10 rounds meant there was really no point to the extra size of the 17 and 19, at least to the people conceal carrying, so Glock created the 26. The 26c didn’t make it however because the compensating cuts caused jams and intense, blinding fireballs with the 3.6” barrel.
The Glock models leading up to this are
17, the full sized 9mm model. 4.49” barrel, 17 rounds
18, the 17 but select fire
19, compact 9mm model, 4.02” barrel, 15 rounds
20, full size 10mm model, 4.6” barrel, 15 rounds
21, full size .45 A model, 4.6” barrel, 13 rounds
22, full size .40 S&W Model, 4.49” barrel, 15 rounds
23, compact .40 S&W model, 4.02” barrel, 13 rounds
24, long slide .40 S&W model, 6.02” barrel, 15 rounds
25, compact .380 A model, 4.02” barrel, 15 rounds.
I find it incredible that a topic about weapons is one of the cutest thing in this hentai community.
Maybe I've found my tribe..
Gentlemen, today was the first time in my life I fired a gun. Even though we were in an open area, my ears were ringing. How do people fire these guns one after the other?
The humble hearing protection:
what gun you fire Bronald Reagan
Is there a way to rename the forum
We might want our own signature on some things.
Wait wtf are they doing with shotguns?
Turks are very notorious for shotgun clones from what I understand. I think the bottom right red shotgun may be a Derya
Shit doesnt even look like a shotgun.
The Derya DY9 pistol is fine from what I hear. I just checked their shotguns, it seems they got rid of a lot of them. They were MUCH crazier a while back
Didnt turkish shotguns have the reputation of making people lose fingers because they blow up?
I was not aware of that
there's a reason people call them turkshit and its not because of their outstanding quality
Nah its turkshit because with those guns we'd be shittin on the greeks with their sticks and unauthorized bathtubs in their gardens
I seeing many memes about it
I have taken a liking to the ppsh-41
Guns huh? I had a friend who loved talking about them..
The most Auraful handgun ever

John Moses Browning not only designed the M1911 handgun, but also the M2 50 caliber machine gun, the BAR automatic rifle, the 1887 lever action shotgun, the Auto 5 semi-auto shotgun, the Winchester 1894 lever action rifle
I designed much more
These gun lore drops are weirdly interesting I don’t know why. Good job I guess
The Glock 40 is glock’s largest handgun, being a long slide 10mm. The Glock 42 is glock’s smallest handgun, being a subcompact .380 A, single stack
The Glock 17 is named after the patent number, not the magazine capacity nor caliber. It was Gaston Glock’s 17th patent. The Glock 45 is the 45th patent, and it neither holds 45 rounds nor is a .45 A
Genuinely who the FUCK buys a SIG
Well the P22X line is fine, I love em. But those P320 lovin SIGGERS
Suicidal people buy the p320
Idk. Siggers?
The bank won't stand a chance.
what
S&W Model 1917. Don’t know much of it, at least not to the extent with other guns below, but it’s pretty cool. A large frame revolver chambered for .45 A. Yes, .45 A, the auto cartridge originated in 1905 by JMB with the Colt Model 1905 (later evolved into the venerable 1911). The 1917 was created as basically a space filler. It was there to fill the absence of 1911’s during WW1. If you couldn’t get a 1911, you got a 1917. It used half moon clips to mimic the rim of a revolver cartridge so you could chamber the .45 A’s without them sinking into the cylinder and actually eject them via the clip. You may have seen the 1917 as War Daddy (Brad Pitt)’s revolver in Fury (2014). Pretty cool gun
Went back 25 fucking pages in General Discussion to find this image I made. Shows some of my favorite pistols
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