Yarygin PYa pistol, left side
 Yarygin PYa pistol, right side; note ambidextrous safety in the "ready to fire" position
 Yarygin PYa pistol, with the slide locked open
Type: Double Action
Caliber: 9x19 mm 7N21 (9mm Luger/Para)
Weight unloaded: 950 g (with empty magazine)
Length: 198 mm
Barrel length: 112 mm
Capacity: 17 rounds
 The PYa (Pistolet Yarygina - Yarygin pistol) was developed for the 
Russian Army trials, codenamed "Grach" (rook). These trials were started
 by issuing initial requirements for a new military pistol in 1993. Than
 new pistol should had have a DA trigger, large capacity magazine, all 
steel construction and be able to be converted into 9x18 PM and PMM, 
9x19mm Luger, and 7.62x25mm TT chamberings. Later on, the multicaliber 
option was dropped from military requirements, and in the late 1990s 
Russian army settled on the improved version of the worlds' most popular
 9mm Luger/Parabellum round, very hot loaded (peak pressure generated by
 7N21 is well beyond 9mm +P standards) and fitted with armour piercing 
bullet with hardened steel core. Several designs were submitted to the 
trials, but eventual winner was the pistol, designed at the state 
Izhevsk Mechanical Plant by the Vladimir Yarygin. This pistol, initially
 known as the 6P35 (military index during trials) or as MP-443 "Grach" 
(manufacturer's designation), now is officially adopted by the Russian 
Government for Military and Law Enforcement use under the PYa 
designation, and already issued to some Russian Army units, most 
probably located in Chechnya.
 In those ages of lightweight alloys and plastics, and complicated 
trigger systems, the all steel DA pistol may look little outdated and 
conservative, but, in my opinion, there's nothing wrong with the 
conservative approach, especially if it the result is well balanced and 
fits the intended niche well, which PYa does. I had the chance to 
examine the production pistol, as well as to see it in action (during 
Russian Law Enforcement IPSC competition, held in September, 2003, near 
the St.Petersburg). For me, PYa appeared as a well balanced, sturdy 
pistol with adequate accuracy and decent firepower. The only things that
 could be improved, in my opinion, are the fixed sights, and the shape 
of the polymer grip panels, that felt too angular in my palm.
 The PYa is a short recoil operated, locked breech pistol. It uses a 
modified Browning "High Power"-style locking, with the cammed slot under
 the barrel, that is used to lock and unlock the single lug on the 
barrel with the ejection window in the slide. The slide and frame are 
made from carbon steel, the barrel is made from stainless steel. The 
conventional DA trigger features an ambidextrous manual safety on the 
frame, that could lock the hammer either in lowered or in cocked 
position, allowing for "cocked and locked" mode carry. There's no 
decocker, and additional automated safety is built into the system, that
 locks the firing pin when trigger is not pressed. The external hammer 
on production pistols is partially enclosed from the sides by the slide 
extensions, to facilitate snag-proof handling. Front sight is machined 
with the slide, rear sight is dovetailed into the same. Both sights 
featured white non-luminous inserts (tritium-filled "night" sights 
available as option). Wrap-around grip panels are made from polymer, and
 the grip is provided with the lanyard ring. Button-operated magazine 
release is located at the base of the triggerguard, and can be mounted 
on either side of the frame, depending on the user preferences (easily 
re-installed by the user itself in a minute). Dual stack magazines are 
made from steel and hold 17 rounds of 9x19mm ammunition, plus one in 
chamber. There's also some information that a 18-rounds magazine will be
 introduced for PYa in 2004.


 09.18
09.18
 Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper
 



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