Zastava M57
Zastava M57 | |
---|---|
Type | Semi-automatic pistol |
Place of origin | Yugoslavia |
Service history | |
In service | 1963–1992 (Yugoslavia) |
Used by | Yugoslav People's Army, Viet Cong, North Vietnamese Army |
Wars | Vietnam War, Gulf War, Yugoslav Wars |
Production history | |
Designer | Zastava Arms |
Designed | 1957 |
Manufacturer | Zastava Arms |
Produced | 1960–present |
Variants | See Variants |
Specifications | |
Mass | 854 g (30.1 oz) |
Length | 194 mm (7.6 in) |
Barrel length | 116 mm (4.6 in) |
Height | 134 mm (5.3 in) |
Cartridge | 7.62×25mm Tokarev |
Action | Short recoil actuated, locked breech, single action |
Muzzle velocity | 480 m/s (1,575 ft/s) |
Effective firing range | 50 m |
Feed system | 9-round detachable box magazine |
Sights | Front blade, rear notch 156 mm (6.1 in) sight radius |
The Zastava M57 pistol was a standard sidearm of the Yugoslav Army. It is a single-action pistol chambered for the fast and powerful 7.62×25mm Tokarev cartridge. These are very popular surplus weapons in the West, as they are affordable and plentiful. Currently, the M57 and M70 pistols are produced, updated with slide-mounted safeties, While many original M57 handguns have frame-mounted import safeties, As well as a magazine disconnect, making the gun incapable of firing without a magazine.
History[]
Adopted in 1957, the M57 was a license-produced copy of the Soviet Tokarev TT pistol, although the M57 had a longer grip to accommodate a larger magazine (holding 9 rounds, versus 8 rounds in the TT). Around 1970[citation needed], Crvena Zastava began production of a similar pistol, the M70A, chambered in 9×19mm Luger. As of 2014, Zastava currently manufactures new production M57s, M70As and M88s. These models are updated with more modern safety features and sell at a retail price of $220–300 USD.
Design details[]
The M57 pistol is short-recoil-operated, locked-breech pistol that uses a Browning-type action with swinging link. The trigger is of single-action type. Originally the pistol has no manual safeties except for a half-cock notch on the hammer. Due to BATFE import restrictions, a manual safety was fitted to surplus models imported to the United States. The controls on many of the military surplus M57s are identical to those of the American M1911 pattern US Army pistols, which is a factor in their popularity in the United States; other M57 imports have a trigger safety somewhat like Ruger handguns.
The new manufacture pistols have a manual safety that is mounted on the slide rather than the frame. The new versions of the M57A/M70A also feature a magazine safety that renders the gun unable to fire unless a magazine is inserted into the grip frame. The magazine is single-stack, 9 round capacity. Although the M57 pistol is a TT-30 design, the 8 round magazines of Tokarev pistols manufactured by other nations will not work in the M57 due to them being too short to reach the firing chamber. Its 9-round magazine will however work with other nations' Tokarevs, although it sticks out the bottom slightly. Other (minor) changes include a magazine safety, larger magazine release button, captive recoil spring and M1911 style firing pin and stop.
Variants[]
M57 basic model.
M57A is an upgrade of basic model M57. It has an external safety.
M70 7.65mm Browning compact variant
M70A 9mm version of the M57A
M88 shorter version of M70A.
M88A features an external safety on the slide
As of 2011 M88A are imported in United States by K-VAR/FIME Group.
As of 2012 M57A, M70A and M88A are imported into the U.S. by Century International Arms.
See also[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zastava M57. |
- Semi-automatic pistols of Serbia
- Semi-automatic pistols of Yugoslavia
- 7.62×25mm Tokarev semi-automatic pistols
- Zastava Arms
- TT platform
- Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1957