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The overall technical layout was much akin to the one used by another, very famous Austrian-made pistols line − which Wilhelm Bubits himself had helped to develop years before − but the Steyr pistols were more ergonomic and sleek, and thus much more fit for small-handed shooters. 357 SIG − were striker-fired and featured an injection-molded fibreglass-reinforced polymer frame, a precision-milled, Tenifer-treated stainless steel slide, a cold-hammer forged, polygon-grooved barrel, pressed sheet metal small parts, and a light double-action trigger. Featuring modern technical features and a futuristic design, these short-recoil, locked breech pistols − available in 9mm. Then, in 1999, the company launched the Steyr-Mannlicher M and S semi-automatic pistols, engineered by Wilhelm Bubits and Friedrich Aignerpoi il 1999, e con esso il lancio della linea di pistole semi-automatiche Steyr M ed S: progettate da Wilhelm Bubits e Friedrich Aigner. The Steyr-Mannlicher L-A1 pistol will be available in three calibers: 9x19mm, 9x21mm-IMI and. Military at the end of the 1990s, and there was little or no request for it on the market its semi-automatic civilian version (the SPP pistol), along with the other pistol to have ever been offered by Steyr-Mannlicher in modern times − the GB model, based on a Barnitzke-type gas brake system − had both long gone out of production. Steyr's TMP rotating-barrel sub-machinegun was a spawing from the abortive individual weapons modernization programmes attempted by the U.S. Its signature product − the AUG Bull-Pup rifle design, available both as a select-fire Military/LE firearm and a semi-automatic civilian carbine − had merely been upgraded with Picatinny interfaces, but was otherwise stuck to the standards of the late 1970s, when it had first been fielded. Just like many other important international gunmakers, by the end of the 20th Century the Steyr-Mannlicher company suffered from the lack of dynamism of the gun market, and was thus stuck on a somewhat outdated product line. Looking back, this the ideal ending point of a lenghty renewal phase for Steyr-Mannlicher GmbH − one of the world's most notorious gun manufacturers, headquartered in the Austrian town of Kleinraming − and perhaps it paves the way for yet another one. While it kept the compact design and lightweight, additions made the weapon more in-line with a submachine gun as opposed to a bulky automatic pistol, which resulted in the weapon becoming very popular with police and tactical units.The Steyr-Mannlicher L-A1 semi-automatic pistol is 188mm long and sports a 4.5" barrel The MP9 is a development of the Steyr TMP. Differences from the Steyr TMP include a stock that folds to the right side of the weapon, an integrated Picatinny rail, and new trigger safety. In 2001, Brügger & Thomet purchased TMP design from Steyr. 40 Smith & Wesson caliber has now begun, and there are plans for a modular system of interchangeable parts that will allow the TMP to be converted to fire 9 mm Steyr, 10 mm Auto or.
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Initially made in 9 mm caliber, production in.
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45 automatic pistol and somewhat lighter than most larger caliber revolvers. Single shots can be fired with one hand quite easily it is only slightly heavier than a Colt. Although there is no butt-stock, and no provision for fitting one, the forward handgrip permits adequate control of the weapon, and short bursts can be fired with considerable accuracy after a little practice.