Re: P64 vs. Walther PPK/S
Posted: March 21st, 2012, 12:03 am
Let us know how that ammo works out I have not tried it myself.
Well my friend, I have two P-64's and one PPK/S (Made in Ulm, Germany), and I can say that each gun has pros and cons. My Walther is a dream to shoot and the grip is big enough for me to get the entire hand on the gun, but I find myself having to curl my pinky finger under the grip on my P64's. If I don't do this, I will get "race tracks" on the top of my shooting hand. (Some people call this slide bite) My wife does not have this problem, but her hands are a lot smaller than mine. The P-64's 9x18mm is a bit more powerful than the Walther's 9x17mm. The sights are better on my PPK/S than on my P-64's, but not by a whole bunch. I believe my Polish guns have a little over the German gun in the accuracy department - this is just my shooting results. The Walther carries more rounds on board than the P-64. The magazine release is where we Americans like it to be on the Walther, but the "heel" magazine release on the Polish guns really does not bother me much. I can do a reload about the same speed with each. I have been lucky with the reliability of my P-64's so far - I mean they eat ball and hollow points just the same as my Walther does. I usually use either the Silver Bear HP ammo or the Hornady HP in my Polish guns, and I will usually use the Fiocchi or Hornady HP ammo in my Walther. Both carry about the same, but I would give the edge to the P-64 because I have a couple of pocket holsters that, if I wear the right pants, I can pocket carry the Polish guns where I cannot pocket carry the Walther. For me, personally, I would say it is awash between the two of them. I carry my P-64's way more than I do my Walther. Hope my humble summary helps.Cooper wrote:A couple of weeks ago I joined this forum after becaming intrested in purchasing a P64 for concealed carry. Currently I have a Glock 19, but it is too big.
I have read many of the forum threads on the P64 and am quite impressed with the favorable comments, though there are some negative ones too. One of the key elements of a Concealed Carry pistol is for it to be reliable and for the most part it does seem that the P64 is reliable, however some people have had accidental discharges and poor feeding with some hollow points. I examined a P64 at Gander Mountain yesterday and thought that the magazine release was in an awkward position, it felt good to hold and was easy to aim. Do others find that the magazine release is a serious problem? I note that one forum member fabricates an aftermarket release with an extenstion so it is easier to release the magazine. Of course new springs from Wolff's is a must.
I have also been considering the Walther PPK/S as an alternative choice, they are the same basic size and the Walther has a better magazine release as well as the ammo is likely to be easier to come by. I am not sure whether there are serious differences between the S&W, Interarms or made in Germany version over the years or if it is just loyalty to what people own.
The question that I was hoping to have answered is, if the two pistols were the same price, which would you buy and use as a concealed carry and why?
Thanks! Cooper
Will do, but I have NO experience with ammo as such to give any kind of review.Curly1 wrote:Let us know how that ammo works out I have not tried it myself.
It really does help. The more I read the more I learn. One thing I do like about the Walther is the CT laser option. However it does bring the price up quite a bitp64-1973 wrote:Well my friend, I have two P-64's and one PPK/S (Made in Ulm, Germany), and I can say that each gun has pros and cons. My Walther is a dream to shoot and the grip is big enough for me to get the entire hand on the gun, but I find myself having to curl my pinky finger under the grip on my P64's. If I don't do this, I will get "race tracks" on the top of my shooting hand. (Some people call this slide bite) My wife does not have this problem, but her hands are a lot smaller than mine. The P-64's 9x18mm is a bit more powerful than the Walther's 9x17mm. The sights are better on my PPK/S than on my P-64's, but not by a whole bunch. I believe my Polish guns have a little over the German gun in the accuracy department - this is just my shooting results. The Walther carries more rounds on board than the P-64. The magazine release is where we Americans like it to be on the Walther, but the "heel" magazine release on the Polish guns really does not bother me much. I can do a reload about the same speed with each. I have been lucky with the reliability of my P-64's so far - I mean they eat ball and hollow points just the same as my Walther does. I usually use either the Silver Bear HP ammo or the Hornady HP in my Polish guns, and I will usually use the Fiocchi or Hornady HP ammo in my Walther. Both carry about the same, but I would give the edge to the P-64 because I have a couple of pocket holsters that, if I wear the right pants, I can pocket carry the Polish guns where I cannot pocket carry the Walther. For me, personally, I would say it is awash between the two of them. I carry my P-64's way more than I do my Walther. Hope my humble summary helps.Cooper wrote:A couple of weeks ago I joined this forum after becaming intrested in purchasing a P64 for concealed carry. Currently I have a Glock 19, but it is too big.
I have read many of the forum threads on the P64 and am quite impressed with the favorable comments, though there are some negative ones too. One of the key elements of a Concealed Carry pistol is for it to be reliable and for the most part it does seem that the P64 is reliable, however some people have had accidental discharges and poor feeding with some hollow points. I examined a P64 at Gander Mountain yesterday and thought that the magazine release was in an awkward position, it felt good to hold and was easy to aim. Do others find that the magazine release is a serious problem? I note that one forum member fabricates an aftermarket release with an extenstion so it is easier to release the magazine. Of course new springs from Wolff's is a must.
I have also been considering the Walther PPK/S as an alternative choice, they are the same basic size and the Walther has a better magazine release as well as the ammo is likely to be easier to come by. I am not sure whether there are serious differences between the S&W, Interarms or made in Germany version over the years or if it is just loyalty to what people own.
The question that I was hoping to have answered is, if the two pistols were the same price, which would you buy and use as a concealed carry and why?
Thanks! Cooper
Paragraphs are for a reasonCurly1 wrote:I wish folks would break up there long posts with some paragraphs it makes for easier reading.
I don't bother reading them if they don't regardless of what valuable insites might be buried in there.
Agreed. The other ones that kill me are no puctuation.Curly1 wrote:I wish folks would break up there long posts with some paragraphs it makes for easier reading.
I don't bother reading them if they don't regardless of what valuable insites might be buried in there.
Kinda looks like good ammo? (Does to me) Compare it to "Wolf brand". ...badgerjfr wrote:i just got my shippment of LVE ammo 2 days ago...
i've never shot it before, but i'm itching to get to the range and try it out.
Indeed...and I believe there was a recall on the S&W PPK/S at one time. Of course, the best PPK was made in "West Germany" (before Intertec).Curly1 wrote:I have read that the S&W PPK/S had a lot of quality control problems. I would go for an Interarms manufactured one instead.
Regarding the Florida shooting apparently their "Stand your ground" law includes public common areas which is where this happend in the gated complex.