HK-4 pistol, left side.
  Same pistol, right side.
Characteristics
Type: Double Action
Calibers: 5.6mm rimfire/.22LR; 6.35x16SR/.25ACP; 7.65x17SR/.32ACP; 9x17/.380ACP interchangeable
Weight unloaded: 520 g
Length: 157 mm
Barrel length: 85 mm
Capacity: 7 rounds in 9mm/380 and 8 rounds all other calibers
  The HK-4 was the first pistol to emerge from the now famous German  company Heckler & Koch. HK-4 was the brain child of the Alex Seidel,  one of co-founders and master minds of Heckler-Koch, and a former  Mauser employee. During his years at Mauser Seidel participated in  development of several pistols, including the famous Mauser HSc.  In 1952 Seidel at HK developed a prototype .22LR caliber pistol, based  on Mauser HSc, but the legal problems with Mauser precluded its  production. In 1964, Seidel started the development of the multi-caliber  pocket-size pistol of civilian and police use. This pistol, designated  as HK-4 (Heckler-Koch, four calibers), had some features, based on  Mauser HSc, but in severely modified form. Mass production of the new  pistol started in 1968, and continued until 1984, with about thirty  eight thousands pistols being made. Of those, about 12 thousands HK-4  pistol were bought by German police and other government agencies, the  rest has been sold on domestic and foreign civilian markets.  
  HK-4 pistol was one of the first handguns to employ idea of modularity.  Each pistol can be accommodated for one of the four basic calibers,  with just replacement of the barrel, return spring, and the magazine.  Many HK-4 pistols were sold with caliber change kits, which included  three additional barrels with springs and appropriate magazines. The  frame of HK-4 pistols were made from aluminum alloy, slides were formed  from sheet steel. Double action trigger and, especially, the partially  exposed hammer were somewhat similar in design to Mauser HSc pistol.  Manual safety has been located at the left side of the slide, and, when  engaged, moved the rear part of the firing pin out of the reach of the  hammer and locked the firing pin against the movement toward the  cartridge in the chamber. Additional automatic safeties included  magazine safety, which blocked the trigger when magazine has not been  properly inserted, and a disconnector safety. Return spring was located  around the stationary barrel. Barrel was easily detachable from the  frame, and the barrel lock lever has been located inside the trigger  guard, at its front. To accommodate either centerfire or rimfire  ammunition, HK-4 featured a removable breech plate with two channels for  firing pin - one for centerfire ammunition and another for rimfire  ammunition. To convert between those types of ammunition, one must  disassemble the pistol, remove the breech plate from the slide and set  it so the side marked with "R" will face the barrel breech for rimfire  ammunition, or the side marked with "Z" must face the barrel breech for  centerfire ammunition. HK-4 has internal slide stop mechanism, which  locks the slide open after last shot from magazine has been fired. The  slide stop is automatically disengaged when a new magazine is inserted.  To close the slide on the empty chamber, slide stop is disengaged by the  trigger pull.


 13.20
13.20
 Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper
 


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