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Browning Hi-Power

The Browning Hi-Power is a single-action, semi-automatic pistol available in the 9×19mm Parabellum and .40 S&W calibers. It was based on a design by American firearms inventor John Browning, and completed by Dieudonné Saive at FN Herstal. Browning died in 1926, several years before the design was finalized. FN Herstal named it the "High Power" in allusion to the 13-round magazine capacity, almost twice that of other designs at the time, such as the Luger or Colt M1911.

Browning Hi-Power
Fabrique Nationale Browning Hi-Power
TypeSemi-automatic pistol
Place of origin
  • Belgium
  • United States
Service history
In service1935–present[1]
Used bySee Users
Wars
Production history
Designer
Designed1914–1935[1]
Manufacturer
Produced1935–2018,[1] 2022-[5]
No. built1,500,000+[6]
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications
Mass1 kg (2.2 lb)[1]
Length197 mm (7.8 in)[1]
Barrel length119 mm (4.7 in)[1]

Cartridge
ActionShort recoil operated tilting barrel
Rate of fireSemi-automatic
Muzzle velocity335 m/s (1,100 ft/s) (9mm)[1]
Effective firing range50 m (54.7 yd)
Feed systemDetachable box magazine
  • 10, 13, 15 or 17 rounds (9mm)
  • 20 or 30 rounds made by Rhodesia (9mm)[1]
  • 10 rounds (.40 S&W)

During World War II, Belgium was occupied by Nazi Germany and the FN factory was used by the Wehrmacht to build the pistols for their military, under the designation "9mm Pistole 640(b)".[7] FN Herstal continued to build guns for the Allied forces by moving their production line to a John Inglis and Company plant in Canada, where the name was changed to "Hi Power". The name change was kept even after production returned to Belgium. The pistol is often referred to as an HP or BHP,[8] and the terms P-35 and HP-35 are also used, based on the introduction of the pistol in 1935. Other names include GP (for the French term, "Grande Puissance") or BAP (Browning Automatic Pistol). The Hi-Power is one of the most widely used military pistols in history,[9] having been used by the armed forces of over 50 countries.[1] Although most pistols were built in Belgium by FN Herstal, licensed and unlicensed copies were built around the world, in countries such as Argentina, Hungary, India, Bulgaria, and Israel.

After 82 years of continuous production, FN Herstal announced that the production of the Hi-Power would end, and it was discontinued in early 2018 by Browning Arms.[10] From 2019 to 2022, with new Belgian Hi-Powers no longer being built, new clones were designed by various firearm companies to fill the void, including GİRSAN, TİSAŞ, and Springfield Armory, Inc. These new Hi-Power clones began competing with each other by offering new finishes, enhanced sights, redesigned hammers, beveled magazine wells, improved trigger, and increased magazine capacity.[11][12]

In 2022, FN announced they would resume production of the Browning Hi-Power. The 2022 "FN High Power" incorporated a number of entirely new features such as a fully ambidextrous slide lock, simplified takedown method, enlarged ejection port, reversible magazine release, wider slide serrations, different colored finish offerings, and 17-round magazines. In contrast to popular belief, the new FN High Power might resemble a modern Hi-Power, but it is, in fact, a different design. One of the noticeable details is the lack of Browning-style locking lugs.[5]

History

Development

The Browning Hi-Power was designed in response to a French military requirement for a new service pistol, the "Grand Rendement" (French for "high efficiency"), or alternatively Grande Puissance (literally "high power"). The French military required that:

  • The gun must be compact.
  • The magazine have a capacity of at least 10 rounds.
  • The gun have a magazine disconnect device, an external hammer, and a positive[clarification needed] safety.
  • The gun be robust and simple to disassemble and reassemble.
  • The gun be capable of killing a man at 50 metres.

This last criterion was seen to demand a caliber of 9 mm or larger, a bullet mass of around 8 grams (123.5 grains), and a muzzle velocity of 350 m/s (1148 ft/s). It was to accomplish all of this at a weight not exceeding 1 kg (2.2 lb).

FN commissioned John Browning to design a new military sidearm conforming to this specification. Browning had previously sold the rights to his successful M1911 U.S. Army automatic pistol to Colt's Patent Firearms, and was therefore forced to design an entirely new pistol while working around the M1911 patents. Browning built two different prototypes for the project in Utah and filed the patent for this pistol in the United States on 28 June 1923, granted on 22 February 1927.[13][14] One was a simple blowback design, while the other was operated with a locked-breech recoil system. Both prototypes utilised the new staggered magazine design (by designer Dieudonné Saive) to increase capacity without unduly increasing the pistol's grip size or magazine length.

The locked breech design was selected for further development and testing. This model was striker-fired, and featured a double-stack magazine that held 16 rounds. The design was refined through several trials held by the Versailles Trial Commission.

In 1928, when the patents for the Colt Model 1911 had expired, Dieudonné Saive integrated many of the Colt's previously patented features into the Saive-Browning Model of that same year. This version featured the removable barrel bushing and take down sequence of the Colt 1911.

In 1929, as an effort to find an alternative solution to the long-ongoing French trials, and with a pistol that they considered by then to be good enough to stand on its own to find other potential clients, FN decided to announce the "Grand Rendement", incorporating a shortened 13-round magazine, for sale in their commercial catalogue. They hoped to find a military contract which would in turn help them finance a production line, essentially through the same process as their previous FN M1900 pistol.

By 1931, the Browning Hi-Power design incorporated the same 13-round magazine, a curved rear grip strap, and a barrel bushing that was integral to the slide assembly. The Belgian Army showed a definite interest and bought 1,000 pistols based on this prototype for field trials.

By 1934, the Hi-Power design was complete and ready to be produced. Ultimately, France decided not to adopt the pistol, instead selecting the conceptually similar but lower-capacity Modèle 1935 pistol. However, it was good enough to stand on its own as a service pistol for the Belgian Army and other clients. These would become the Grande Puissance, known as the High Power, in Belgium for military service in 1935 as the Browning P-35.[15]

Military service and widespread use

Browning Hi-Power pistols were used during World War II by both Allied and Axis forces. After occupying Belgium in 1940, German forces took over the FN plant. German troops subsequently used the Hi-Power, having assigned it the designation Pistole 640(b) ("b" for belgisch, "Belgian").[9] Examples produced by FN in Belgium under German occupation bear German inspection and acceptance marks, or Waffenamts, such as WaA613. In German service, it was used mainly by Waffen-SS and Fallschirmjäger personnel.

 
A Browning Hi-Power decorated using the technique of damascening. Of the few created, one of these models was once in the personal possession of Muammar Gaddafi. The design references the Khamis Brigade.

High-Power pistols were also produced in Canada for Allied use, by John Inglis and Company in Toronto. The plans were sent from the FN factory to the UK when it became clear the Belgian plant would fall into German hands, enabling the Inglis factory to be tooled up for Hi-Power production for Allied use. Inglis produced two versions of the Hi-Power, one with an adjustable rear sight and detachable shoulder stock (primarily for a Nationalist Chinese contract) and one with a fixed rear sight. Production began in late 1944 and they were on issue by the March 1945 Operation Varsity airborne crossing of the Rhine into Germany. The pistol was popular with the British airborne forces as well as covert operations and commando groups such as the Special Operations Executive (SOE), the U.S. Office of Strategic Services (OSS), and the British Special Air Service (SAS) Regiment. Inglis High-Powers made for Commonwealth forces have the British designation 'Mk 1' or 'Mk 1*' and the manufacturer's details on the left of the slide. They were known in British and Commonwealth service as the 'Pistol No 2 Mk 1', or 'Pistol No 2 Mk 1*' where applicable. Serial numbers were 6 characters, the second being the letter 'T', e.g. 1T2345. Serial numbers on pistols for the Chinese contract instead used the letters 'CH', but otherwise followed the same format. When the Chinese contract was cancelled, all undelivered Chinese-style pistols were accepted by the Canadian military with designations of 'Pistol No 1 Mk 1' and 'Pistol No 1 Mk 1*'.[16]

In the postwar period, Hi-Power production continued at the FN factory and as part of FN's product range, which included the FN FAL rifle and FN MAG general-purpose machine gun. It has been adopted as the standard service pistol by over 50 armies in 93 countries. At one time most NATO nations used it, and it was standard issue to forces throughout the British Commonwealth. It was manufactured under licence, or in some cases cloned, on several continents. Former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein often carried a Browning Hi-Power. Former Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi carried a gold-plated Hi-Power with his own face design on the left side of the grip which was waved around in the air by Libyan rebels after his death.[17] A Hi-Power was used by Mehmet Ali Agca during the assassination attempt of Pope John Paul II in 1981.

Decline and resurgence

While the Hi-Power remains an excellent and iconic design, since the early 1990s it has been eclipsed somewhat by more modern designs which are often double-action with aluminum alloy frames and are manufactured using more modern methods. However, even to this day, the Hi-Power remains in service throughout the world. As of 2017, the MK1 version remained the standard service pistol of the Canadian Armed Forces, with the SIG Sauer P226 being issued to specialised units along with the SIG Sauer P225. The weapon is the standard sidearm of the Belgian Army, Indian Army, Indonesian Armed Forces, Australian Defence Force, Argentine Army, Luxembourg Armed Forces, Israel Police, and Venezuelan Army, among others. The Irish Army replaced its Browning Pistols (known popularly as BAPs, or Browning Automatic Pistols) with the Heckler & Koch USP in 2007. From 2013 the British Army is replacing the Browning with the polymer-framed Glock 17 Gen 4 pistol, due to concerns about weight and the external safety of the pistol.[18]

In 2018, FN announced they would end production of the Mark III Hi-Power, which was expensive to produce and had been assembled in Portugal to cut costs. Early in that year, Browning officially ceased production of the Belgian Hi-Power for the first time since 1935. An unlicensed clone called the "Regent BR9" was produced in Turkey by TİSAŞ in 2019 and had gained some popularity now that authentic Hi-Powers were no longer being made and surplus Hi-Powers from other countries like Hungary and Argentina had dried up. The Regent BR9 design was more of a copy of the Mark I design, but did offer some modern design features, like a cerakote or stainless steel finish and Novak-style sights.[11] In 2021, another Turkish company called GİRSAN began producing their own Hi-Power clone called the MCP35, imported by EAA. In 2021, American firearms company Springfield Armory announced their own Hi-Power clone, the SA-35.[12] GİRSAN and Springfield Armory's clones began competing with each other by offering new design improvements that would help them compete in the oversaturated defensive handgun market. GİRSAN's MCP35 attempted to replicate the Mark III design as closely as possible, including the Belgian style ambidextrous thumb safety, Mark III style sights with a windage drift adjustable rear sight and dovetailed front sight and Mark III style black polymer grips. The MCP35 also retained the Belgian magazine disconnect safety. However, the MCP35 incorporated the original ring hammer design instead of the claw hammer design of the Mark III, and also incorporated some design elements to appeal to the modern shooter, such as a 15-round Mec-Gar magazine and cerakote finish.[19]

The steady competition between the MCP35 and the SA-35 to make the original Hi-Power relevant in the current market stirred up a great interest among both Hi-Power fans and new shooters. On 18 January 2022, after a four year hiatus, FN announced they would resume production of the Browning Hi-Power, albeit with a number of upgraded features.[5] FN named the 2022 redesign the "FN High Power" and incorporated a number of features to help it compete with the improved Hi-Power clones being made by GİRSAN and Springfield Armory. FN incorporated a number of changes that would make the classic Hi-Power design more modern and ergonomic. The most significant changes included opening up the top of the slide to increase the size of the ejection port to ensure reliable feeding and ejection, incorporating an ambidextrous slide lock and reversible magazine release, a completely different takedown that is faster and simpler, and redesigning the barrel and recoil spring. Other changes FN made include removing the magazine disconnect safety, adding an extended beavertail and redesigned hammer to eliminate the issue of hammer bite, several sets of redesigned grips, new sights compatible with the FN 509 dovetail pattern, wider slide serrations, different colored PVD or stainless steel finish offerings and 17 round magazines. The new FN High Powers will be made at FN's Columbia, South Carolina factory in the United States.[20][21][5] At SHOT show 2022, GİRSAN announced new color offerings for the MCP35, including two-tone and gold, as well as the MCP35 "Match", which incorporated a number of designs intended to cater to target shooters, such as an integrated 1913 picatinny rail for accessories, ergonomic grips, a shorter hammer throw, beveled and flared magwell, a flat target trigger and raised target sights with a fiber optic front sight.[22][23]

Design

 
A FN Browning High Power, belonging to the Indonesian Marine Corps

The Browning Hi-Power has undergone continuous refinement by FN since its introduction. The pistols were originally made in two models: an "Ordinary Model" with fixed sights and an "Adjustable Rear Sight Model" with a tangent-type rear sight and a slotted grip for attaching a wooden shoulder stock. The adjustable sights are still available on commercial versions of the Hi-Power, although the shoulder stock mounts were discontinued during World War II. In 1962, the design was modified to replace the internal extractor with an external extractor, improving reliability.

Standard Hi-Powers are based on a single-action design. Unlike modern double-action semi-automatic pistols, the Hi-Power's trigger is not connected to the hammer. If a double-action pistol is carried with the hammer down with a round in the chamber and a loaded magazine installed, the shooter may fire the pistol either by simply squeezing the trigger or by pulling the hammer back to the cocked position and then squeezing the trigger. In contrast, a single-action pistol can only be fired with the hammer in the cocked position; this is generally done when a loaded magazine is inserted and the slide cycled by hand. In common with the M1911, the Hi-Power is therefore typically carried with the hammer cocked, a round in the chamber, and the safety catch on (a carry mode often called cocked and locked in the United States or "made ready" in the UK, or sometimes called condition one).

The Hi-Power, like many other Browning designs, operates on the short-recoil principle, where the barrel and slide initially recoil together until the barrel is unlocked from the slide by a cam arrangement. Unlike Browning's earlier Colt M1911 pistol, the barrel is not moved vertically by a toggling link, but instead by a hardened bar which crosses the frame under the barrel and contacts a slot under the chamber at the rearmost part of the barrel. The barrel and slide recoil together for a short distance, but as the slot engages the bar, the chamber and the rear of the barrel are drawn downward and stopped. The downward movement of the barrel disengages it from the slide, which continues rearward, extracting the spent case from the chamber and ejecting it while also re-cocking the hammer. After the slide reaches the limit of its travel, the recoil spring brings it forward again, stripping a new round from the magazine and pushing it into the chamber. This also pushes the chamber and barrel forward. The cam slot and bar move the chamber upward and the locking lugs on the barrel re-engage those in the slide.

Design flaws

The pistol has a tendency to "bite" the web of the shooter's hand, between the thumb and forefinger. This bite is caused by pressure from the hammer spur, or alternatively by pinching between the hammer shank and grip tang. This problem can be fixed by altering or replacing the hammer, or by learning to hold the pistol to avoid injury. While a common complaint with the commercial models with spur hammers similar to that of the Colt "Government Model" automatic, it is seldom a problem with the military models, which have a smaller, rounded "burr" hammer, more like that of the Colt "Commander" compact version of the 1911. Another flaw is that the original small safety is very hard to release and re-engage. This is because when cocked, the shaft the safety turns on is under hammer spring pressure. Later versions went to a larger safety to address this issue.[24][25][26]

 
Hi-Power artillery version with its adjustable tangent rear-sight and shoulder-stock in the upper right-hand corner

Variants

Genuine Browning Hi-Power P-35s were manufactured until 2017 by FN Herstal of Belgium and Portugal and under licence by Fabricaciones Militares (FM) of Argentina. The Hi-Power remains one of the most influential pistols in the history of small arms. It has inspired a number of clone manufacturers (including Charles Daly of the Philippines & the US, FEG of Hungary, Arcus of Bulgaria, IMI of Israel, and others). Many modern pistols borrow features from it, such as the staggered column high-capacity magazine and the Browning linkless cam locking system (which on modern pistols is often simplified so that the barrel locks into the ejection port, meaning the barrel and slide do not have to be machined for locking lugs). Until recently, FEG made an almost exact clone in 9mm and .40 S&W, but the company now manufactures a version with modifications to the barrel, linkage, and slide stop that are incompatible with genuine Hi-Powers. Arcus has also superseded its Arcus 94 Hi-Power clone with the Arcus 98DA, a model that draws heavily from the Hi-Power but is capable of double-action operation.

  • The original P35, as noted earlier, featured an internal extractor. During World War II, it was manufactured by Inglis of Canada for Allied use, and by FN in occupied Belgium for German use. The P35s made under Nazi occupation were designated as the Pistole 640b. Most Canadian P35s were manufactured with a parkerized finish, while most P35s manufactured in occupied Belgium had a blued finish. In 1962 the internal extractor was replaced with a more durable and reliable external extractor alongside other modifications, including a 2-piece barrel and modifications to the locking system for improved durability. Later barrels and frames are not interchangeable with earlier ones.
  • The L9A1 was the British designation for the military version of the post-1962 Hi-Power, and is marked 'Pistol Automatic L9A1' on the left side of the slide. It started to replace Inglis variants in British service from the late 1960s, and the two types remained in service together until the Inglis variants were finally retired in the late 1980s. The L9A1 was upgraded with the more ergonomic Mk2 ambidextrous safety and grips. The L9A1 was also widely used by other Commonwealth armed forces. The Hi-Power was the pistol issued to the British Special Air Service throughout the Cold War era. It was phased out in 2013 and replaced with the Glock 17.[27]
  • The Mark I is among the best-known models of the P35 developed over the last 50 years. P35s were first imported into the US in 1954 – the US civilian market P35s had the 'Browning Arms Company' stamp on the left side of the slide (to meet the import requirement for US sales under ATF Section 478.112). These P35s lack the provision of the lanyard ring – the left side pistol grip for a Mark I is fully covered unlike those produced for military and law enforcement use. A wide variety of options and features are available on the P35 models. Recently, Hi-Power pistols have become available in the .40 S&W and .357 SIG loadings. The use of these calibres in guns designed and built for 9×19mm Parabellum has created cases of broken or warped frames. Only Hi-Powers specifically built for these rounds should be used to fire them. The pistols manufactured for these two rounds are easily identified by examining the left side of the slide – a groove is machined into the side of the heavier slide to allow clearance for the slide release. Genuine FN-produced P35s (either FN (Europe/international) or Browning (USA) for the civilian market will have a 245-prefix serial number. Some Hi-Power variants (Type 65, Type 73) incorporate production changes e.g. spur hammers (commonly seen for 1971–present civilian market P35s) and/or 2-piece barrels (1965–present). The 'Type 73' variant (with an elongated barrel bushing) of the Mark I was produced into the late 1980s (to 1987) by FM Argentina when Mark II production commenced in the early-mid-1980s (Belgium).
  • The Pistol, Browning FN 9mm, HP No. 2 MK.1/1 Canadian Lightweight Pattern was a series of experimental aluminum/aluminum alloy framed Browning Hi-Power pistols by the Canadian Inglis Company that reduced the weight by as much as 25% (8.5 oz lighter to 25.5 oz).[28] Two scalloped cuts were made on both sides of the steel slide as well as in front of the rear sight. The reception to this was positive and so six prototype frames were machined from solid aluminum and two were sent to each of the Canadian, American, and British governments for testing. The Canadian and British governments concluded that sand and dirt caught between the steel slide and aluminum frame substantially increased wear. The steel locking block also wore the holes in its aluminum frame. After testing, Inglis cast 29 frames, assembled 21 pistols, and tested them, which were met with various problems. The lightweight program was ended in Canada in 1951. In 1952, a US Major General Kessels requested one and took it with him in the Korean War.[29]
  • The Mark I Lightweight is a very rare variant of the Mark I made with a lightweight alloy frame originally intended for paratroop use. According to Massad Ayoob, these were introduced commercially in the 1950s but never caught on. The Lightweights are marked only with Fabrique Nationale's rollmarks, not Browning's.
  • Mark II is an upgraded model of the original Hi-Power introduced in the early '80s. Some of the upgrades were ambidextrous thumb safeties, nylon grips, 3-dot sights, and a throated barrel.
 
Browning Hi-Power Practical .40 S&W
 
Browning Hi-Power SFS with Crimson Trace laser sight
  • Mark III was another advancement over the Mark II released in 1988, which featured a firing pin safety and a black epoxy finish. The main distinguishing (visual) feature of the Mark III is the absence of the water drain hole below the muzzle on the forward face of the slide.
    • Standard is the name given to the Mark III variant with walnut grips, gloss finish, and choice of sights. A Standard is a Mark III model, but a Mark III is not necessarily a Standard.
    • The Silver Chrome featured a silver-chrome frame and slide, and Pachmayr rubber grips. The magazines for the silver chrome BHP had a dull finish and a black rubber Pachmayr basepad.
    • The Capitan is a Mark III variant that features adjustable tangent rear sights, a "ring hammer" like the early model HP35, checkered walnut grips, and a blued finish. It was reintroduced in 1993.[30]
    • The Practical is a Mark III variant featuring a slide finished in black polymer with a contrasting silver-chrome frame. In addition, this model has wraparound Pachmayr rubber grips and a "ring hammer". The Practical has fixed or adjustable sights, and is available in either 9 mm or .40 S&W. Magazines for all Practical models sport Pachmayr base pads; magazines feature a cartridge capacity of 13 rounds in 9 mm and a cartridge capacity of 10 rounds in .40 S&W.[31]
    • The HP-SFS (Safe-Fast-Shooting) is the latest Hi-Power Mark III variant with a modified firing mechanism. After the weapon is loaded, the hammer is pushed forward, which automatically activates the safety catch. When the shooter is prepared to fire, the safety is pressed down with the thumb, releasing the hammer to spring backwards into the usual, single-action position. A similar system is available for modifying Colt M1911A1s. Magazines are interchangeable with the Mark III and others.
  • The BDA and BDAO models were first produced in the 1980s by FN. The BDA model is double-action, and the BDAO model is "double-action only", both versions differing from the usual single-action operation of the P35. These designs have also been marketed as the FN HP-DA and Browning BDA. The DA and DAO models retain many features of the P35, and both are available in full-sized and compact versions. The performance of these models is consistent with FN's high standards. These models resemble the P35, but the most distinguishing feature is the extended SIG Sauer-style trigger guard. Many parts are interchangeable with the P35, but the magazines (although similar) are not. The compact versions also utilise shorter magazines.[31]
  • The Browning BDM Model is sometimes erroneously attributed as a special model of the Hi-Power family of pistols. This is a unique pistol design only bearing an external similarity to the Hi-Power. The BDM was produced during the 1990s in North America by Browning Arms Company, and not by FN. The Browning BDM (Browning Double Mode) pistol incorporates many features of the BDA model. It can be switched from double-action/single-action mode to "revolver" mode (Double-Action Only) by the flip of a slide-mounted switch (this requires the use of a flathead screwdriver or a coin, as the switch doesn't have a tang).
  • Both the DA/DAO models and the BDM model borrow features from the SIG P220 pistols marketed under the name Browning Double Action (BDA) in the 1970s. The Beretta Cheetah has also been marketed by Browning under the name BDA 380.[citation needed]
  • Pistol Auto 9mm 1A is manufactured in India by the Ordnance Factories Board at Rifle Factory Ishapore.[32] It is a licensed copy of the Canadian Inglis 9mm pistol with a matte black finish and black plastic grips.
 
Pistol Auto 9mm 1A manufactured in RFI, India
  • The Detective is a short-slide HP produced by FM. The Detective slide group was also available without the frame, and is interchangeable with other FM and FN Hi-Power P35s. The pistol and slide group have not been available for North American sales since the late 2000s, but can be found in resale outlets.
  • The Rosario, FM90, and FM95 models are manufactured by FM. The Rosario is an almost exact copy of the Mark II intended for Argentine and Latin American sales. The FM90 was an export model based on the Mark II, but with a "Colt style" slide without the characteristic bevelled front end, first made in 1990.[33] Rubberized pistol grips (similar to the Pachmayr grips used for P35s) with finger grooves were used in place of the traditional slab side wood grips. The FM95 was the current export model (until 2002) based on the Mark III, also with the "Colt style" slide. The last models, until 2010, are the M02 AR (modernised version of the M95, with a new single-action system by Fabrique nationale) and the M03 AR (not dated 2003, as it would seem, actually a .40 S&W version of M02 AR) with their Detective versions.[31]
  • Fabricaciones Militares of Argentina has also developed a double-action pistol, not using the HP DA system.
  • The Arcus 94 is a single-action semi-automatic pistol manufactured by Arcus of Bulgaria as an unlicensed clone. There is a compact version, the Arcus 94C. It has been succeeded in production by the double-action Arcus 98DA.
  • On 25 October 2021, Springfield Armory launched a reproduction of the Hi-Power called the SA-35.[34] It has the features of the original Hi-Power, but has a capacity of 15 rounds while the pistol can handle +P 9 mm Luger loads.[35]
  • On 18 January 2022, FN America re-introduced a new model of Hi-Power called the FN High Power. The new pistol features a 17+1 magazine capacity and various ergonomic changes to improve user handling.[5]

Users

 
Canadian Inglis-made Pistol No 2 Mk 1* Browning Hi-Power
 
Browning Hi-Power made in 1961
 
A worn Browning Hi-Power, made in Argentina in the mid-1970s
 
Canadian soldiers inspect a Hi-Power pistol during a training exercise in April 2009.
 
A Uruguayan marine armed with a Canadian made Hi-Power during a training exercise in April 2009
 
A 1971 Browning Hi-Power 10

References

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  2. ^ Bloomfield, Lincoln P.; Leiss, Amelia Catherine (30 June 1967). The Control of local conflict: a design study on arms control and limited war in the developing areas (PDF). Vol. 3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for International Studies. pp. 78, 89. hdl:2027/uiug.30112064404368. (PDF) from the original on 4 August 2020.
  3. ^ Small Arms Survey (2015). (PDF). Small Arms Survey 2015: weapons and the world (PDF). Cambridge University Press. p. 201. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2018. at the Wayback Machine (archived 2018-01-28)
  4. ^ Conflict Armament Research (September 2014). Islamic State Weapons in Iraq and Syria: Analysis of weapons and ammunition captured from Islamic State forces in Iraq and Syria (PDF). p. 10. (PDF) from the original on 26 August 2018. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Highpower".
  6. ^ . FN Herstal. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  7. ^ MacGregor, Steve (7 December 2018). "Shot by both sides – The Browning High Power in WW2".
  8. ^ . Browning.com. Archived from the original on 10 December 2012. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Arnold, David W. (24 September 2010). "Classic Handguns of the 20th Century: The Browning HI-Power". Handguns Magazine. from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  10. ^ "Browning Ends Hi-Power Production -". 6 February 2018. from the original on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 30 January 2019.
  11. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 28 July 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Springfield Armory SA-35 Review". 27 December 2021.
  13. ^ Gangarosa, Gene Jr. (1999). FN...Browning: Armorer to the World. Stoeger Publishing, New Jersey. pp. 63–65.
  14. ^ U.S. Patent 1,618,510
  15. ^ "Before the High Power was the FN Grand Rendement". 8 August 2022.
  16. ^ Law, Clive M. (2001). Inglis Diamond - The Canadian High Power Pistol. Collector Grade Publications. ISBN 978-0889352650.
  17. ^ "Confirmed Gaddafi dead: New York Yankees baseball fan 'captured' tyrant - Mirror Online". Mirror.co.uk. 20 October 2011. from the original on 21 January 2012. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  18. ^ "British armed forces get first new pistol since World War II". The Register. 11 January 2013. from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  19. ^ "Girsan MCP35".
  20. ^ "[SHOT 2022] the FN Hi-Power is Reborn -". 18 January 2022.
  21. ^ "An Official Journal of the NRA | New for 2022: FN High Power".
  22. ^ "[SHOT 2022] is 2022 the Year of the Hi-Power? Girsan MCP35 and Other new Pistols from EAA -". 19 January 2022.
  23. ^ "[SHOT 2022] the Modern Hi-Power, the EAA/Girsan MC P35 Match -". 19 January 2022.
  24. ^ "What's Wrong With the Hi Power?". Shooting Illustrated. 20 March 2015.
  25. ^ "The Browning HI-POWER Today". Guns magazine. February 2004.
  26. ^ "A Look Back at the Browning High Power Pistol". www.americanrifleman.org. 24 October 2017.
  27. ^ Wyatt, Caroline (11 January 2013). "Glock 17 9mm pistols replace Browning for UK forces". BBC News. from the original on 11 January 2013. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
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External links

  • Official page
  • HiPowers and Handguns
  • F.N. mod. G.P. (Grande Puissance) pictures (in French)
  • FN Hi-Power Manual

browning, power, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, october, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, . This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Browning Hi Power is a single action semi automatic pistol available in the 9 19mm Parabellum and 40 S amp W calibers It was based on a design by American firearms inventor John Browning and completed by Dieudonne Saive at FN Herstal Browning died in 1926 several years before the design was finalized FN Herstal named it the High Power in allusion to the 13 round magazine capacity almost twice that of other designs at the time such as the Luger or Colt M1911 Browning Hi PowerFabrique Nationale Browning Hi PowerTypeSemi automatic pistolPlace of originBelgium United StatesService historyIn service1935 present 1 Used bySee UsersWarsWorld War II 1 Indonesian National Revolution 2 Chinese Civil War Korean War Vietnam War Rhodesian Bush War Falklands War The Troubles Lebanese Civil War Salvadoran Civil War Sri Lankan Civil War Tuareg rebellion 1990 1995 Yugoslav Wars Kivu Conflict Israeli Palestinian conflict 3 Libyan Crisis Syrian Civil War 4 Production historyDesignerJohn Browning Dieudonne SaiveDesigned1914 1935 1 ManufacturerFabrique Nationale FN John Inglis amp Co Browning ArmsProduced1935 2018 1 2022 5 No built1 500 000 6 VariantsSee VariantsSpecificationsMass1 kg 2 2 lb 1 Length197 mm 7 8 in 1 Barrel length119 mm 4 7 in 1 Cartridge7 65 21mm Parabellum 9 19mm Parabellum 1 40 S amp WActionShort recoil operated tilting barrelRate of fireSemi automaticMuzzle velocity335 m s 1 100 ft s 9mm 1 Effective firing range50 m 54 7 yd Feed systemDetachable box magazine 10 13 15 or 17 rounds 9mm 20 or 30 rounds made by Rhodesia 9mm 1 10 rounds 40 S amp W During World War II Belgium was occupied by Nazi Germany and the FN factory was used by the Wehrmacht to build the pistols for their military under the designation 9mm Pistole 640 b 7 FN Herstal continued to build guns for the Allied forces by moving their production line to a John Inglis and Company plant in Canada where the name was changed to Hi Power The name change was kept even after production returned to Belgium The pistol is often referred to as an HP or BHP 8 and the terms P 35 and HP 35 are also used based on the introduction of the pistol in 1935 Other names include GP for the French term Grande Puissance or BAP Browning Automatic Pistol The Hi Power is one of the most widely used military pistols in history 9 having been used by the armed forces of over 50 countries 1 Although most pistols were built in Belgium by FN Herstal licensed and unlicensed copies were built around the world in countries such as Argentina Hungary India Bulgaria and Israel After 82 years of continuous production FN Herstal announced that the production of the Hi Power would end and it was discontinued in early 2018 by Browning Arms 10 From 2019 to 2022 with new Belgian Hi Powers no longer being built new clones were designed by various firearm companies to fill the void including GIRSAN TISAS and Springfield Armory Inc These new Hi Power clones began competing with each other by offering new finishes enhanced sights redesigned hammers beveled magazine wells improved trigger and increased magazine capacity 11 12 In 2022 FN announced they would resume production of the Browning Hi Power The 2022 FN High Power incorporated a number of entirely new features such as a fully ambidextrous slide lock simplified takedown method enlarged ejection port reversible magazine release wider slide serrations different colored finish offerings and 17 round magazines In contrast to popular belief the new FN High Power might resemble a modern Hi Power but it is in fact a different design One of the noticeable details is the lack of Browning style locking lugs 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 2 Military service and widespread use 1 3 Decline and resurgence 2 Design 2 1 Design flaws 3 Variants 4 Users 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditDevelopment Edit The Browning Hi Power was designed in response to a French military requirement for a new service pistol the Grand Rendement French for high efficiency or alternatively Grande Puissance literally high power The French military required that The gun must be compact The magazine have a capacity of at least 10 rounds The gun have a magazine disconnect device an external hammer and a positive clarification needed safety The gun be robust and simple to disassemble and reassemble The gun be capable of killing a man at 50 metres This last criterion was seen to demand a caliber of 9 mm or larger a bullet mass of around 8 grams 123 5 grains and a muzzle velocity of 350 m s 1148 ft s It was to accomplish all of this at a weight not exceeding 1 kg 2 2 lb FN commissioned John Browning to design a new military sidearm conforming to this specification Browning had previously sold the rights to his successful M1911 U S Army automatic pistol to Colt s Patent Firearms and was therefore forced to design an entirely new pistol while working around the M1911 patents Browning built two different prototypes for the project in Utah and filed the patent for this pistol in the United States on 28 June 1923 granted on 22 February 1927 13 14 One was a simple blowback design while the other was operated with a locked breech recoil system Both prototypes utilised the new staggered magazine design by designer Dieudonne Saive to increase capacity without unduly increasing the pistol s grip size or magazine length The locked breech design was selected for further development and testing This model was striker fired and featured a double stack magazine that held 16 rounds The design was refined through several trials held by the Versailles Trial Commission In 1928 when the patents for the Colt Model 1911 had expired Dieudonne Saive integrated many of the Colt s previously patented features into the Saive Browning Model of that same year This version featured the removable barrel bushing and take down sequence of the Colt 1911 In 1929 as an effort to find an alternative solution to the long ongoing French trials and with a pistol that they considered by then to be good enough to stand on its own to find other potential clients FN decided to announce the Grand Rendement incorporating a shortened 13 round magazine for sale in their commercial catalogue They hoped to find a military contract which would in turn help them finance a production line essentially through the same process as their previous FN M1900 pistol By 1931 the Browning Hi Power design incorporated the same 13 round magazine a curved rear grip strap and a barrel bushing that was integral to the slide assembly The Belgian Army showed a definite interest and bought 1 000 pistols based on this prototype for field trials By 1934 the Hi Power design was complete and ready to be produced Ultimately France decided not to adopt the pistol instead selecting the conceptually similar but lower capacity Modele 1935 pistol However it was good enough to stand on its own as a service pistol for the Belgian Army and other clients These would become the Grande Puissance known as the High Power in Belgium for military service in 1935 as the Browning P 35 15 Military service and widespread use Edit Browning Hi Power pistols were used during World War II by both Allied and Axis forces After occupying Belgium in 1940 German forces took over the FN plant German troops subsequently used the Hi Power having assigned it the designation Pistole 640 b b for belgisch Belgian 9 Examples produced by FN in Belgium under German occupation bear German inspection and acceptance marks or Waffenamts such as WaA613 In German service it was used mainly by Waffen SS and Fallschirmjager personnel A Browning Hi Power decorated using the technique of damascening Of the few created one of these models was once in the personal possession of Muammar Gaddafi The design references the Khamis Brigade High Power pistols were also produced in Canada for Allied use by John Inglis and Company in Toronto The plans were sent from the FN factory to the UK when it became clear the Belgian plant would fall into German hands enabling the Inglis factory to be tooled up for Hi Power production for Allied use Inglis produced two versions of the Hi Power one with an adjustable rear sight and detachable shoulder stock primarily for a Nationalist Chinese contract and one with a fixed rear sight Production began in late 1944 and they were on issue by the March 1945 Operation Varsity airborne crossing of the Rhine into Germany The pistol was popular with the British airborne forces as well as covert operations and commando groups such as the Special Operations Executive SOE the U S Office of Strategic Services OSS and the British Special Air Service SAS Regiment Inglis High Powers made for Commonwealth forces have the British designation Mk 1 or Mk 1 and the manufacturer s details on the left of the slide They were known in British and Commonwealth service as the Pistol No 2 Mk 1 or Pistol No 2 Mk 1 where applicable Serial numbers were 6 characters the second being the letter T e g 1T2345 Serial numbers on pistols for the Chinese contract instead used the letters CH but otherwise followed the same format When the Chinese contract was cancelled all undelivered Chinese style pistols were accepted by the Canadian military with designations of Pistol No 1 Mk 1 and Pistol No 1 Mk 1 16 In the postwar period Hi Power production continued at the FN factory and as part of FN s product range which included the FN FAL rifle and FN MAG general purpose machine gun It has been adopted as the standard service pistol by over 50 armies in 93 countries At one time most NATO nations used it and it was standard issue to forces throughout the British Commonwealth It was manufactured under licence or in some cases cloned on several continents Former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein often carried a Browning Hi Power Former Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi carried a gold plated Hi Power with his own face design on the left side of the grip which was waved around in the air by Libyan rebels after his death 17 A Hi Power was used by Mehmet Ali Agca during the assassination attempt of Pope John Paul II in 1981 Decline and resurgence Edit While the Hi Power remains an excellent and iconic design since the early 1990s it has been eclipsed somewhat by more modern designs which are often double action with aluminum alloy frames and are manufactured using more modern methods However even to this day the Hi Power remains in service throughout the world As of 2017 the MK1 version remained the standard service pistol of the Canadian Armed Forces with the SIG Sauer P226 being issued to specialised units along with the SIG Sauer P225 The weapon is the standard sidearm of the Belgian Army Indian Army Indonesian Armed Forces Australian Defence Force Argentine Army Luxembourg Armed Forces Israel Police and Venezuelan Army among others The Irish Army replaced its Browning Pistols known popularly as BAPs or Browning Automatic Pistols with the Heckler amp Koch USP in 2007 From 2013 the British Army is replacing the Browning with the polymer framed Glock 17 Gen 4 pistol due to concerns about weight and the external safety of the pistol 18 In 2018 FN announced they would end production of the Mark III Hi Power which was expensive to produce and had been assembled in Portugal to cut costs Early in that year Browning officially ceased production of the Belgian Hi Power for the first time since 1935 An unlicensed clone called the Regent BR9 was produced in Turkey by TISAS in 2019 and had gained some popularity now that authentic Hi Powers were no longer being made and surplus Hi Powers from other countries like Hungary and Argentina had dried up The Regent BR9 design was more of a copy of the Mark I design but did offer some modern design features like a cerakote or stainless steel finish and Novak style sights 11 In 2021 another Turkish company called GIRSAN began producing their own Hi Power clone called the MCP35 imported by EAA In 2021 American firearms company Springfield Armory announced their own Hi Power clone the SA 35 12 GIRSAN and Springfield Armory s clones began competing with each other by offering new design improvements that would help them compete in the oversaturated defensive handgun market GIRSAN s MCP35 attempted to replicate the Mark III design as closely as possible including the Belgian style ambidextrous thumb safety Mark III style sights with a windage drift adjustable rear sight and dovetailed front sight and Mark III style black polymer grips The MCP35 also retained the Belgian magazine disconnect safety However the MCP35 incorporated the original ring hammer design instead of the claw hammer design of the Mark III and also incorporated some design elements to appeal to the modern shooter such as a 15 round Mec Gar magazine and cerakote finish 19 The steady competition between the MCP35 and the SA 35 to make the original Hi Power relevant in the current market stirred up a great interest among both Hi Power fans and new shooters On 18 January 2022 after a four year hiatus FN announced they would resume production of the Browning Hi Power albeit with a number of upgraded features 5 FN named the 2022 redesign the FN High Power and incorporated a number of features to help it compete with the improved Hi Power clones being made by GIRSAN and Springfield Armory FN incorporated a number of changes that would make the classic Hi Power design more modern and ergonomic The most significant changes included opening up the top of the slide to increase the size of the ejection port to ensure reliable feeding and ejection incorporating an ambidextrous slide lock and reversible magazine release a completely different takedown that is faster and simpler and redesigning the barrel and recoil spring Other changes FN made include removing the magazine disconnect safety adding an extended beavertail and redesigned hammer to eliminate the issue of hammer bite several sets of redesigned grips new sights compatible with the FN 509 dovetail pattern wider slide serrations different colored PVD or stainless steel finish offerings and 17 round magazines The new FN High Powers will be made at FN s Columbia South Carolina factory in the United States 20 21 5 At SHOT show 2022 GIRSAN announced new color offerings for the MCP35 including two tone and gold as well as the MCP35 Match which incorporated a number of designs intended to cater to target shooters such as an integrated 1913 picatinny rail for accessories ergonomic grips a shorter hammer throw beveled and flared magwell a flat target trigger and raised target sights with a fiber optic front sight 22 23 Design Edit A FN Browning High Power belonging to the Indonesian Marine Corps The Browning Hi Power has undergone continuous refinement by FN since its introduction The pistols were originally made in two models an Ordinary Model with fixed sights and an Adjustable Rear Sight Model with a tangent type rear sight and a slotted grip for attaching a wooden shoulder stock The adjustable sights are still available on commercial versions of the Hi Power although the shoulder stock mounts were discontinued during World War II In 1962 the design was modified to replace the internal extractor with an external extractor improving reliability Standard Hi Powers are based on a single action design Unlike modern double action semi automatic pistols the Hi Power s trigger is not connected to the hammer If a double action pistol is carried with the hammer down with a round in the chamber and a loaded magazine installed the shooter may fire the pistol either by simply squeezing the trigger or by pulling the hammer back to the cocked position and then squeezing the trigger In contrast a single action pistol can only be fired with the hammer in the cocked position this is generally done when a loaded magazine is inserted and the slide cycled by hand In common with the M1911 the Hi Power is therefore typically carried with the hammer cocked a round in the chamber and the safety catch on a carry mode often called cocked and locked in the United States or made ready in the UK or sometimes called condition one The Hi Power like many other Browning designs operates on the short recoil principle where the barrel and slide initially recoil together until the barrel is unlocked from the slide by a cam arrangement Unlike Browning s earlier Colt M1911 pistol the barrel is not moved vertically by a toggling link but instead by a hardened bar which crosses the frame under the barrel and contacts a slot under the chamber at the rearmost part of the barrel The barrel and slide recoil together for a short distance but as the slot engages the bar the chamber and the rear of the barrel are drawn downward and stopped The downward movement of the barrel disengages it from the slide which continues rearward extracting the spent case from the chamber and ejecting it while also re cocking the hammer After the slide reaches the limit of its travel the recoil spring brings it forward again stripping a new round from the magazine and pushing it into the chamber This also pushes the chamber and barrel forward The cam slot and bar move the chamber upward and the locking lugs on the barrel re engage those in the slide Design flaws Edit The pistol has a tendency to bite the web of the shooter s hand between the thumb and forefinger This bite is caused by pressure from the hammer spur or alternatively by pinching between the hammer shank and grip tang This problem can be fixed by altering or replacing the hammer or by learning to hold the pistol to avoid injury While a common complaint with the commercial models with spur hammers similar to that of the Colt Government Model automatic it is seldom a problem with the military models which have a smaller rounded burr hammer more like that of the Colt Commander compact version of the 1911 Another flaw is that the original small safety is very hard to release and re engage This is because when cocked the shaft the safety turns on is under hammer spring pressure Later versions went to a larger safety to address this issue 24 25 26 Hi Power artillery version with its adjustable tangent rear sight and shoulder stock in the upper right hand cornerVariants EditGenuine Browning Hi Power P 35s were manufactured until 2017 by FN Herstal of Belgium and Portugal and under licence by Fabricaciones Militares FM of Argentina The Hi Power remains one of the most influential pistols in the history of small arms It has inspired a number of clone manufacturers including Charles Daly of the Philippines amp the US FEG of Hungary Arcus of Bulgaria IMI of Israel and others Many modern pistols borrow features from it such as the staggered column high capacity magazine and the Browning linkless cam locking system which on modern pistols is often simplified so that the barrel locks into the ejection port meaning the barrel and slide do not have to be machined for locking lugs Until recently FEG made an almost exact clone in 9mm and 40 S amp W but the company now manufactures a version with modifications to the barrel linkage and slide stop that are incompatible with genuine Hi Powers Arcus has also superseded its Arcus 94 Hi Power clone with the Arcus 98DA a model that draws heavily from the Hi Power but is capable of double action operation The original P35 as noted earlier featured an internal extractor During World War II it was manufactured by Inglis of Canada for Allied use and by FN in occupied Belgium for German use The P35s made under Nazi occupation were designated as the Pistole 640b Most Canadian P35s were manufactured with a parkerized finish while most P35s manufactured in occupied Belgium had a blued finish In 1962 the internal extractor was replaced with a more durable and reliable external extractor alongside other modifications including a 2 piece barrel and modifications to the locking system for improved durability Later barrels and frames are not interchangeable with earlier ones The L9A1 was the British designation for the military version of the post 1962 Hi Power and is marked Pistol Automatic L9A1 on the left side of the slide It started to replace Inglis variants in British service from the late 1960s and the two types remained in service together until the Inglis variants were finally retired in the late 1980s The L9A1 was upgraded with the more ergonomic Mk2 ambidextrous safety and grips The L9A1 was also widely used by other Commonwealth armed forces The Hi Power was the pistol issued to the British Special Air Service throughout the Cold War era It was phased out in 2013 and replaced with the Glock 17 27 The Mark I is among the best known models of the P35 developed over the last 50 years P35s were first imported into the US in 1954 the US civilian market P35s had the Browning Arms Company stamp on the left side of the slide to meet the import requirement for US sales under ATF Section 478 112 These P35s lack the provision of the lanyard ring the left side pistol grip for a Mark I is fully covered unlike those produced for military and law enforcement use A wide variety of options and features are available on the P35 models Recently Hi Power pistols have become available in the 40 S amp W and 357 SIG loadings The use of these calibres in guns designed and built for 9 19mm Parabellum has created cases of broken or warped frames Only Hi Powers specifically built for these rounds should be used to fire them The pistols manufactured for these two rounds are easily identified by examining the left side of the slide a groove is machined into the side of the heavier slide to allow clearance for the slide release Genuine FN produced P35s either FN Europe international or Browning USA for the civilian market will have a 245 prefix serial number Some Hi Power variants Type 65 Type 73 incorporate production changes e g spur hammers commonly seen for 1971 present civilian market P35s and or 2 piece barrels 1965 present The Type 73 variant with an elongated barrel bushing of the Mark I was produced into the late 1980s to 1987 by FM Argentina when Mark II production commenced in the early mid 1980s Belgium The Pistol Browning FN 9mm HP No 2 MK 1 1 Canadian Lightweight Pattern was a series of experimental aluminum aluminum alloy framed Browning Hi Power pistols by the Canadian Inglis Company that reduced the weight by as much as 25 8 5 oz lighter to 25 5 oz 28 Two scalloped cuts were made on both sides of the steel slide as well as in front of the rear sight The reception to this was positive and so six prototype frames were machined from solid aluminum and two were sent to each of the Canadian American and British governments for testing The Canadian and British governments concluded that sand and dirt caught between the steel slide and aluminum frame substantially increased wear The steel locking block also wore the holes in its aluminum frame After testing Inglis cast 29 frames assembled 21 pistols and tested them which were met with various problems The lightweight program was ended in Canada in 1951 In 1952 a US Major General Kessels requested one and took it with him in the Korean War 29 The Mark I Lightweight is a very rare variant of the Mark I made with a lightweight alloy frame originally intended for paratroop use According to Massad Ayoob these were introduced commercially in the 1950s but never caught on The Lightweights are marked only with Fabrique Nationale s rollmarks not Browning s Mark II is an upgraded model of the original Hi Power introduced in the early 80s Some of the upgrades were ambidextrous thumb safeties nylon grips 3 dot sights and a throated barrel Browning Hi Power Practical 40 S amp W Browning Hi Power SFS with Crimson Trace laser sight Mark III was another advancement over the Mark II released in 1988 which featured a firing pin safety and a black epoxy finish The main distinguishing visual feature of the Mark III is the absence of the water drain hole below the muzzle on the forward face of the slide Standard is the name given to the Mark III variant with walnut grips gloss finish and choice of sights A Standard is a Mark III model but a Mark III is not necessarily a Standard The Silver Chrome featured a silver chrome frame and slide and Pachmayr rubber grips The magazines for the silver chrome BHP had a dull finish and a black rubber Pachmayr basepad The Capitan is a Mark III variant that features adjustable tangent rear sights a ring hammer like the early model HP35 checkered walnut grips and a blued finish It was reintroduced in 1993 30 The Practical is a Mark III variant featuring a slide finished in black polymer with a contrasting silver chrome frame In addition this model has wraparound Pachmayr rubber grips and a ring hammer The Practical has fixed or adjustable sights and is available in either 9 mm or 40 S amp W Magazines for all Practical models sport Pachmayr base pads magazines feature a cartridge capacity of 13 rounds in 9 mm and a cartridge capacity of 10 rounds in 40 S amp W 31 The HP SFS Safe Fast Shooting is the latest Hi Power Mark III variant with a modified firing mechanism After the weapon is loaded the hammer is pushed forward which automatically activates the safety catch When the shooter is prepared to fire the safety is pressed down with the thumb releasing the hammer to spring backwards into the usual single action position A similar system is available for modifying Colt M1911A1s Magazines are interchangeable with the Mark III and others The BDA and BDAO models were first produced in the 1980s by FN The BDA model is double action and the BDAO model is double action only both versions differing from the usual single action operation of the P35 These designs have also been marketed as the FN HP DA and Browning BDA The DA and DAO models retain many features of the P35 and both are available in full sized and compact versions The performance of these models is consistent with FN s high standards These models resemble the P35 but the most distinguishing feature is the extended SIG Sauer style trigger guard Many parts are interchangeable with the P35 but the magazines although similar are not The compact versions also utilise shorter magazines 31 The Browning BDM Model is sometimes erroneously attributed as a special model of the Hi Power family of pistols This is a unique pistol design only bearing an external similarity to the Hi Power The BDM was produced during the 1990s in North America by Browning Arms Company and not by FN The Browning BDM Browning Double Mode pistol incorporates many features of the BDA model It can be switched from double action single action mode to revolver mode Double Action Only by the flip of a slide mounted switch this requires the use of a flathead screwdriver or a coin as the switch doesn t have a tang Both the DA DAO models and the BDM model borrow features from the SIG P220 pistols marketed under the name Browning Double Action BDA in the 1970s The Beretta Cheetah has also been marketed by Browning under the name BDA 380 citation needed Pistol Auto 9mm 1A is manufactured in India by the Ordnance Factories Board at Rifle Factory Ishapore 32 It is a licensed copy of the Canadian Inglis 9mm pistol with a matte black finish and black plastic grips Pistol Auto 9mm 1A manufactured in RFI India The Detective is a short slide HP produced by FM The Detective slide group was also available without the frame and is interchangeable with other FM and FN Hi Power P35s The pistol and slide group have not been available for North American sales since the late 2000s but can be found in resale outlets The Rosario FM90 and FM95 models are manufactured by FM The Rosario is an almost exact copy of the Mark II intended for Argentine and Latin American sales The FM90 was an export model based on the Mark II but with a Colt style slide without the characteristic bevelled front end first made in 1990 33 Rubberized pistol grips similar to the Pachmayr grips used for P35s with finger grooves were used in place of the traditional slab side wood grips The FM95 was the current export model until 2002 based on the Mark III also with the Colt style slide The last models until 2010 are the M02 AR modernised version of the M95 with a new single action system by Fabrique nationale and the M03 AR not dated 2003 as it would seem actually a 40 S amp W version of M02 AR with their Detective versions 31 Fabricaciones Militares of Argentina has also developed a double action pistol not using the HP DA system The Arcus 94 is a single action semi automatic pistol manufactured by Arcus of Bulgaria as an unlicensed clone There is a compact version the Arcus 94C It has been succeeded in production by the double action Arcus 98DA On 25 October 2021 Springfield Armory launched a reproduction of the Hi Power called the SA 35 34 It has the features of the original Hi Power but has a capacity of 15 rounds while the pistol can handle P 9 mm Luger loads 35 On 18 January 2022 FN America re introduced a new model of Hi Power called the FN High Power The new pistol features a 17 1 magazine capacity and various ergonomic changes to improve user handling 5 Users Edit Canadian Inglis made Pistol No 2 Mk 1 Browning Hi Power Browning Hi Power made in 1961 A worn Browning Hi Power made in Argentina in the mid 1970s Canadian soldiers inspect a Hi Power pistol during a training exercise in April 2009 A Uruguayan marine armed with a Canadian made Hi Power during a training exercise in April 2009 A 1971 Browning Hi Power 10 Argentina Made under license and used by the military and police The army use the M95 and M02AR 9 36 37 Australia Mark III currently the general issue pistol for the Australian Defence Force 36 37 38 to be replaced with the SIG Sauer P320 39 Austria Bahrain 37 Bangladesh 37 Barbados 37 Belgium Adopted by the Belgian Army in 1935 36 40 Belgian Army now uses the FN Five seveN Belize 37 Bermuda 37 Bolivia 37 Botswana 37 Brunei 37 Burundi 37 Cambodia 37 Canada Canadian Forces use pistols made by the John Inglis Co of Ontario Canada as their primary service pistol 9 36 37 41 It will be replaced by the SIG Sauer P320 starting in mid 2023 42 Chad 37 Chile 43 Republic of China Used pistols made by the John Inglis Co of Ontario Canada 9 China Unlicensed copies were produced by Norinco 44 Colombia 37 Croatia 9 000 supplied by Argentina during the Yugoslav wars 45 Cuba 37 Cyprus 37 Democratic Republic of Congo 37 Denmark 9 37 designated m 46 46 Dominican Republic 43 Ecuador 37 El Salvador 37 Estonia 9 47 Finland 2 400 Pistols imported from Belgium in 1939 1940 used during last stages of Winter War common usage during Continuation War mostly issued to pilots Retired in 1980s 48 37 France Used by Gendarmerie Nationale and French Air Force during first Indochina war and Algerian war citation needed Ghana 37 Greece Used pistols made by the John Inglis Co of Ontario Canada 9 Guatemala 37 Honduras 37 Hong Kong Used by the Royal Hong Kong Regiment 49 Hungary Identical copy was produced 50 India Produced locally as Pistol Auto 9mm 1A by Indian Ordnance Factory Ishapore Arms using stamping dies from the former John Inglis manufacturing facility in Toronto Ontario Canada 36 37 44 Indonesia General issue sidearm for Indonesian Armed Forces especially by Komando Pasukan Katak Kopaska naval tactical diver group and Komando Pasukan Khusus Kopassus army special forces group 51 Made under license by Pindad as the P1 52 Iran Used by Iranian Navy special forces citation needed Iraq 37 Ireland Used by the Irish Defence Forces since replaced by the Heckler amp Koch USP 53 Israel Used by YAMAM before being replaced by various Glock models 54 Produced locally 44 Jamaica Issued to officers of the Jamaica Defence Force 55 Jordan 37 Kenya 37 Kuwait 37 Lebanon 37 Liberia 37 Libya 56 Lithuania 9 37 Luxembourg 36 Replaced by Glock 17 57 Malawi 37 Malaysia General issue sidearm for senior rank officers and special forces of the military and police 58 Mali People s Movement for the Liberation of Azawad 59 Mozambique 37 Myanmar Known in Tatmadaw service as the MA 5 MK I 60 37 Namibia Used by Namibian Police Force NAMPOL 61 Nazi Germany Over 300 000 pistols were made for the Wehrmacht after the FN factory was seized by Germany Pistols were designated the Pistole 640 b 9 North Korea Canadian made examples known to be used by North Korean special forces 62 Nepal 37 Netherlands 9 37 47 New Zealand replaced by the Sig Sauer P226 citation needed Nigeria Produced under license by the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria 63 37 Oman 37 Pakistan Used by Special Service Group Navy 64 Panama 37 Papua New Guinea Supplied by Australia 37 65 Paraguay 37 Peru 9 37 Philippines 37 Poland 66 Formerly used by Polish special forces JW GROM no longer in use Portugal Since 1935 by the gendarmerie Republican National Guard 37 67 Rhodesia 9 68 Romania 9 Rwanda 37 Saudi Arabia 37 Sierra Leone 37 South Africa Used by the South African Special Forces Brigade citation needed Sri Lanka 37 Sudan 37 Suriname 37 Syria 69 Tanzania 37 Thailand Used by the Royal Thai Air Force 37 Togo 37 Trinidad and Tobago 37 Tunisia 37 Turkey Used by General Directorate of Security Uganda 37 United Arab Emirates 37 United Kingdom Used in limited numbers by British airborne and commando units as well as the Special Operations Executive during the Second World War Formally adopted by the British Army as the L9 a replacement for Webley and Enfield revolvers in 1954 1 36 37 and by the Northern Ireland Security Guard Service in 1998 70 better source needed Replaced by the Glock 17 Gen 4 71 United States Used by the FBI Hostage Rescue Team 54 and standard military issue to SOG during the Vietnam War 72 Uruguay 37 To be replaced by Glock 17 73 Venezuela 36 37 Vietnam A small quantity brought into the country by the Australian Army during the Vietnam War can still be found at Vietnam People s Army s shooting ranges citation needed Zimbabwe 37 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Miller David 2001 The Illustrated Directory of 20th Century Guns Salamander Books Ltd ISBN 1 84065 245 4 Bloomfield Lincoln P Leiss Amelia Catherine 30 June 1967 The Control of local conflict a design study on arms control and limited war in the developing areas PDF Vol 3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for International Studies pp 78 89 hdl 2027 uiug 30112064404368 Archived PDF from the original on 4 August 2020 Small Arms Survey 2015 Waning Cohesion The Rise and Fall of the FDLR FOCA PDF Small Arms Survey 2015 weapons and the world PDF Cambridge University Press p 201 Archived from the original PDF on 20 October 2016 Retrieved 29 August 2018 Small Arms Survey 2015 at the Wayback Machine archived 2018 01 28 Conflict Armament Research September 2014 Islamic State Weapons in Iraq and Syria Analysis of weapons and ammunition captured from Islamic State forces in Iraq and Syria PDF p 10 Archived PDF from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 31 August 2018 a b c d e Highpower FN Herstal Major Product Achievements FN Herstal Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 24 June 2010 MacGregor Steve 7 December 2018 Shot by both sides The Browning High Power in WW2 Browning Catalog Browning com Archived from the original on 10 December 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Arnold David W 24 September 2010 Classic Handguns of the 20th Century The Browning HI Power Handguns Magazine Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 19 January 2010 Browning Ends Hi Power Production 6 February 2018 Archived from the original on 30 January 2019 Retrieved 30 January 2019 a b Tisas BR9 Vs Browning s Hi Power Archived from the original on 28 July 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2021 a b Springfield Armory SA 35 Review 27 December 2021 Gangarosa Gene Jr 1999 FN Browning Armorer to the World Stoeger Publishing New Jersey pp 63 65 U S Patent 1 618 510 Before the High Power was the FN Grand Rendement 8 August 2022 Law Clive M 2001 Inglis Diamond The Canadian High Power Pistol Collector Grade Publications ISBN 978 0889352650 Confirmed Gaddafi dead New York Yankees baseball fan captured tyrant Mirror Online Mirror co uk 20 October 2011 Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 British armed forces get first new pistol since World War II The Register 11 January 2013 Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Girsan MCP35 SHOT 2022 the FN Hi Power is Reborn 18 January 2022 An Official Journal of the NRA New for 2022 FN High Power SHOT 2022 is 2022 the Year of the Hi Power Girsan MCP35 and Other new Pistols from EAA 19 January 2022 SHOT 2022 the Modern Hi Power the EAA Girsan MC P35 Match 19 January 2022 What s Wrong With the Hi Power Shooting Illustrated 20 March 2015 The Browning HI POWER Today Guns magazine February 2004 A Look Back at the Browning High Power Pistol www americanrifleman org 24 October 2017 Wyatt Caroline 11 January 2013 Glock 17 9mm pistols replace Browning for UK forces BBC News Archived from the original on 11 January 2013 Retrieved 11 January 2013 F Nathaniel 19 December 2016 The Hi Power of the Future in 1948 Canada s Lightweight Aluminum Framed Browning The Firearm Blog Archived from the original on 17 December 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine McCollum Ian Experimental Lightweight Browning High Power Youtube Forgotten Weapons Retrieved 17 December 2018 Michalowski Kevin ed The Gun Digest Book of Guns for Personal Defense Arms amp Accessories for Self Defense Handguns Browning pg 48 KP Books Iola Wisconsin 2004 a b c Fabrica Militar Fray Luis Beltran FMFLB Myaflb com ar Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 8 September 2008 PISTOL AUTO 9 MM 1A WITH CES ITEMS Ordnance Factory Board Government of India Archived from the original on 23 July 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2021 The FM Argentine Hi Power Archived from the original on 28 June 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2017 SA 35 Review Dissecting Springfield s New Pistol 24 February 2022 An Official Journal of the NRA Springfield Armory SA 35 High Power Classic Modern American a b c d e f g h Valpolini Paolo June 2009 There are Two Types of Men in this World PDF Armada International Online Archived from the original PDF on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 13 February 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk Jones Richard D Jane s Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 Jane s Information Group 35 edition January 27 2009 ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 Self Loading Pistol 9 millimetre Mark 3 Australian Army Archived from the original on 27 February 2012 ADF signs up for next generation of weapons Defence News Press release Department of Defence 30 September 2022 Retrieved 5 October 2022 Landcomponent Onderwerp Bewapening GP 9 mm Mil be Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Browning 9mm Pistol Canadian Forces 13 May 2009 Archived from the original on 2 August 2009 Retrieved 27 June 2009 Defence National 6 October 2022 Canada awards contract for new Army pistols www canada ca Retrieved 7 October 2022 a b Gander Terry J Hogg Ian V Jane s Infantry Weapons 1995 1996 Jane s Information Group 21 edition May 1995 ISBN 978 0 7106 1241 0 a b c Multiplying the Sources PDF www smallarmssurvey org Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2011 Defensa com 31 July 2013 Lo que Croacia se llevo de la Argentina Noticias Defensa Documentos Defensa com in Spanish Retrieved 26 November 2022 Wiener Friedrich 1987 The armies of the NATO nations Organization concept of war weapons and equipment Truppendienst Handbooks Volume 3 Vienna Herold Publishers p 425 a b Ministry of Defence Royal Netherlands Army 1991 Handboek voor de Soldaat 1991 Soldier s Handbook VS 2 1350 ed Ministry of Defence pp 22 1 Revolvers amp Pistols part 3 24 May 2014 RHKR Equipment Weapons www rhkr org The Royal Hong Kong Regiment The Volunteers Association Archived from the original on 16 June 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 Bishop Chris 1998 Guns in Combat Chartwell Books Inc ISBN 0 7858 0844 2 Kopassus amp Kopaska Specijalne Postrojbe Republike Indonezije in Croatian Hrvatski Vojnik Magazine Archived from the original on 22 August 2010 Retrieved 12 June 2010 Un repaso a las armas ligeras de Pindad in Spanish ARMAS Archived from the original on 2 April 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2010 Lavery Don 2 September 2006 Defence Forces to turn tomb raiders Irish Independent Archived from the original on 19 December 2011 Retrieved 16 September 2010 a b Meyr Eitan 6 January 1999 Special Weapons for Counter terrorist Units Jane s Law Enforcement Archived from the original on 1 March 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2009 ncoicinnet Web Site of the Jamaica Defence Force Jdfmil org Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Jenzen Jones N R McCollum Ian April 2017 Small Arms Survey ed Web Trafficking Analysing the Online Trade of Small Arms and Light Weapons in Libya PDF Working Paper No 26 pp 48 53 57 Archived from the original PDF on 9 October 2018 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Armement Armee lu Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Thompson Leroy December 2008 Malaysian Special Forces Special Weapons Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 30 November 2009 Small Arms Survey 2005 Sourcing the Tools of War Small Arms Supplies to Conflict Zones Small Arms Survey 2005 Weapons at War Oxford University Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 19 928085 8 Archived from the original PDF on 30 August 2018 Retrieved 29 August 2018 MA5 MK II The Burmese Tatmadaw s Production Glock Handgun 20 July 2018 Archived from the original on 3 August 2018 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Struggle Kids break colleague out of Police Station Archived from the original on 4 September 2015 유용원의 군사세계 Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Okoroafor Cynthia 27 August 2015 You probably didn t know that Nigeria already manufactures these weapons Ventures Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 24 January 2017 Special Forces Maritime Pakistan Amphibious and special forces Archived from the original on 11 April 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2013 Gun Violence Crime and Politics in the Southern Highlands www iansa org Archived from the original on 15 December 2010 Sebastian Miernik Strona poswiecona Wojskowej Formacji Specjalnej GROM Grom mil pl Archived from the original on 14 August 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Historia PDF Gnr pt Archived PDF from the original on 25 October 2012 Retrieved 3 November 2012 Neil Grant 2015 Rhodesian Light Infantryman 1961 1980 Osprey Publishing p 21 ISBN 978 1472809629 Stevens R Blake The Browning High Power Automatic Pistol Collector Grade Publications 1990 ISBN 978 0 88935 089 2 The state of the Union Brendan O Neill Archived from the original on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 16 March 2012 British Military Adopts Glock 17 Archived 2014 01 13 at the Wayback Machine Modernserviceweapons com January 12 2013 Rottman Gordon L 20 September 2011 US MACV SOG Reconnaissance Team in Vietnam Warrior 159 Osprey Publishing p 40 ISBN 9781849085137 Uruguay to produce Glock pistols Archived 2013 11 09 at the Wayback Machine Janes com 28 April 2013External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Browning HP Wikiquote has quotations related to Browning Hi Power Official page HiPowers and Handguns F N mod G P Grande Puissance pictures in French History and Disassembly Instructions for the Browning Hi Power Browning Hi Power prototypes FN Hi Power Manual Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Browning Hi Power amp oldid 1143863622, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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