CZAK W
Posted: September 17th, 2013, 1:21 pm
I have recently meet a new friend from Poland, Grzegorz Plichta. He sells Holsters and other Polish military items. If interested, PM me and I will send you his email address. Many of his items are listed on Gunbroker.
Anyways, This is what he emailed me today:
Enclosed you will find a scan of a picture a prototype of the CZAK W pistol from a book I own.
Here is some information that I found on a Polish internet forum today and translated into English. It seems the P-64 has been developed as a weapon for undercover officers from the start. And it was only adopted by the army and the police because they had no alternatives.
" At the turn of 60s and 70s Poland needed a new gun for the military, police and the secret service (SB). The military wanted something smaller and lighter than the TT, the Ministry of Interior Affairs (MSW which supervised the Police and the SB) subordinate formations wanted a compact weapon for undercover carry (the equivalent of the Czech vz. 50, German PP / PPK, or, later, the Hungarian PA-63) a TT was deemed good enough for uniformed police officers. This is why the CZAK W (designed to be carried in a holster, so the larger size) and CZAK M (police, but mainly for undercover officers) were created. In 1962, the Army withdrew from the design proces because the then Chief of Staff Gen. Jerzy BordziĆowski ruled the TT is a proven design and there is no need to replace it with anything. The CZAK program was taken over by the Ministry of Interior Affairs on who's motion the slide catch was removed and the shape of the grips was changed. Both changes were made to reduce the risk of hooking on clothes when removing the gun from a hidden holster. In the mid-60s gen. BordziĆowski was replaced by brigadier gen. Mieczyslaw Bronowiecki and the Army again became interested in CZAK, but this time they decided not to return to the CZAK W (significantly different from the modified CZAK M) and only adopt the latter version."
Anyways, This is what he emailed me today:
Enclosed you will find a scan of a picture a prototype of the CZAK W pistol from a book I own.
Here is some information that I found on a Polish internet forum today and translated into English. It seems the P-64 has been developed as a weapon for undercover officers from the start. And it was only adopted by the army and the police because they had no alternatives.
" At the turn of 60s and 70s Poland needed a new gun for the military, police and the secret service (SB). The military wanted something smaller and lighter than the TT, the Ministry of Interior Affairs (MSW which supervised the Police and the SB) subordinate formations wanted a compact weapon for undercover carry (the equivalent of the Czech vz. 50, German PP / PPK, or, later, the Hungarian PA-63) a TT was deemed good enough for uniformed police officers. This is why the CZAK W (designed to be carried in a holster, so the larger size) and CZAK M (police, but mainly for undercover officers) were created. In 1962, the Army withdrew from the design proces because the then Chief of Staff Gen. Jerzy BordziĆowski ruled the TT is a proven design and there is no need to replace it with anything. The CZAK program was taken over by the Ministry of Interior Affairs on who's motion the slide catch was removed and the shape of the grips was changed. Both changes were made to reduce the risk of hooking on clothes when removing the gun from a hidden holster. In the mid-60s gen. BordziĆowski was replaced by brigadier gen. Mieczyslaw Bronowiecki and the Army again became interested in CZAK, but this time they decided not to return to the CZAK W (significantly different from the modified CZAK M) and only adopt the latter version."