Coonan pistol, right side
 Coonan pistol, left side
 Coonan Cadet pistol
| Coonan standard model | Coonan Cadet model | |
| Type | Single Action semiautomatic | |
| Caliber(s) | .357 Magnum, .38 Special +P | .357 Magnum | 
| Weight unloaded | 1190 g | 1100 g | 
| Length | 210 mm | 182 mm | 
| Barrel length | 127 mm | 99 mm | 
| Magazine capacity | 7 or 8 rounds | 6 rounds | 
 Dan Coonan, an American gun designer, started the development of a .357
 Magnum caliber semiautomatic pistol in around 1977. He did so in the 
search of combat / defensive pistol that will provide same terminal 
effectiveness as .357 caliber revolvers, but with bigger capacity and 
faster reloading, specific to semiautomatic pistols. He first designed a
 working magazine (not a simple thing assuming the relatively large 
overall length and a rimmed case design of a .357 Magnum round). Once 
magazine was ready, Dan Coonan built his first forking prototype using 
standard M1911
 parts; to be able to fit long .357 cartridges, he had cut the slide and
 the frame (in the grip area) and welded in steel inserts to increase 
length of parts. First Coonan .357 Mag barrel barrel was made from solid
 block of steel. Once prototype pistol was finished and successfully 
tested, Coonan established its own business, Coonan Arms Inc., and 
started to make pistols of his design. Through the time, basic design 
was upgraded to Model B, with major improvement being the introduction 
of the linkless barrel system. During early 1990's Coonan introduced a 
cut-down "Cadet" model with shortened barrel and grip; at about the same
 time he also worked on .41 Magnum caliber pistol, which apparently was 
never finished. Coonan arms also offered .38 Special +P caliber 
conversion kits, which included weaker return springs and magazines with
 spacers, which were necessary to firmly hold shorter rounds.
In the year 1994 Coonan Arms Inc went filed bankruptcy, and in the same year it was reorganized and lived on until 1998, when it was dissolved. At the present time, parts and repair service for Coonan pistols are offered by Dan Coonan Inc. Coonan pistols are out of production and no longer made.
Overall, Coonan pistols were fine weapons, suitable for most applications like self-defence (including concealed carry), service use by police officers, hunting, target shooting. These pistols were made to rather high standard and thus were somewhat expensive.
In the year 1994 Coonan Arms Inc went filed bankruptcy, and in the same year it was reorganized and lived on until 1998, when it was dissolved. At the present time, parts and repair service for Coonan pistols are offered by Dan Coonan Inc. Coonan pistols are out of production and no longer made.
Overall, Coonan pistols were fine weapons, suitable for most applications like self-defence (including concealed carry), service use by police officers, hunting, target shooting. These pistols were made to rather high standard and thus were somewhat expensive.
 Coonan Model A pistols were short recoil operated, locked breech 
pistols that employed Browning-type system with tilting barrel, 
connected to the frame with swinging link (system, borrowed from Colt M1911
 pistol). Conan model B and smaller Cadet pistols were similar to Model A
 except for simplified linkless barrel tilting system. Single action 
trigger with exposed hammer, automated grip safety and frame-mounted 
manual safety also were copied from M1911.
 Magazines were single stack; early magazines held 7 rounds, late 
production magazines held 8 rounds; shorter Cadet magazines hold only 6 
rounds. Coonan pistols were fitted either with Millet type adjustable or
 with combat type fixed sights; rear sight was dovetailed to the slide.


 10.47
10.47
 Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper
 



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