Walther P22: Love, tolerate, sell
Posted: Tue Aug 04, 2009 9:14 pm
In March 2007 I bought a Walther P22 (SN *******). I think there are 3 kinds of P22 owners: absolute fanatics about the pistol, those who tolerate and enjoy them and former owners.
Positives:
Small (3/4 scale P99) and light, very easy to carry.
DA/SA pistol (great for training)
Relatively insensitive to ammo
Threaded barrel (unless you live in CA), easy to mount suppressors.
Cute and cool looks
Comes with three front sights of different heights. The rear site can be adjusted for windage, but no click detent and not very precise.
Negatives:
Materials of construction. The zinc allow slide is susceptible to wear. The trigger bar is stamped and the ears can have sharp edges. The slide rides on the ears and can be rapidly worn. At 600 rounds this one had metal flakes in the action and the slide was obviously being worn by the trigger bar ears. I sent it back to S&W and they said the wear was normal. They replaced the barrel for some reason and either did a bit of polishing on the slide or sent another, used slide back. I've polished the trigger bar ears and the problem vanished (must do, IMO).
The old series (A?) magazines have a tendency not to feed some rounds. Mine may or may not feed the second round. Seems to feed the rest without problems.
The extractor is poor, resulting in casings either bubbling up from the pistol about six inches or going back toward the shooter's face. It is a good idea with mine to wear a hat, glasses and button your shirt at the neck. There is a newer extractor and I believe VQ has one out or in the process of marketing one.
The size and weight along with the short site radius will find shooting flaws and exaggerate them.
Must Read if you own one
1911M on RFC has done an excellent job of dissecting the pistol and coming up with fixes. http://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/fo ... y.php?f=48. Also see his P22 Bible: http://www.freespeech.com/1917-1911M_P22_bible.pdf
My opinion of the P22 puts me in the second category of owners (tolerate and enjoy). It is definitely a fun shooter. I've also decided to keep it until I learn to shoot it consistently and well and then decide if I'm a cat 1 or cat 3 owner.
Positives:
Small (3/4 scale P99) and light, very easy to carry.
DA/SA pistol (great for training)
Relatively insensitive to ammo
Threaded barrel (unless you live in CA), easy to mount suppressors.
Cute and cool looks
Comes with three front sights of different heights. The rear site can be adjusted for windage, but no click detent and not very precise.
Negatives:
Materials of construction. The zinc allow slide is susceptible to wear. The trigger bar is stamped and the ears can have sharp edges. The slide rides on the ears and can be rapidly worn. At 600 rounds this one had metal flakes in the action and the slide was obviously being worn by the trigger bar ears. I sent it back to S&W and they said the wear was normal. They replaced the barrel for some reason and either did a bit of polishing on the slide or sent another, used slide back. I've polished the trigger bar ears and the problem vanished (must do, IMO).
The old series (A?) magazines have a tendency not to feed some rounds. Mine may or may not feed the second round. Seems to feed the rest without problems.
The extractor is poor, resulting in casings either bubbling up from the pistol about six inches or going back toward the shooter's face. It is a good idea with mine to wear a hat, glasses and button your shirt at the neck. There is a newer extractor and I believe VQ has one out or in the process of marketing one.
The size and weight along with the short site radius will find shooting flaws and exaggerate them.
Must Read if you own one
1911M on RFC has done an excellent job of dissecting the pistol and coming up with fixes. http://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/fo ... y.php?f=48. Also see his P22 Bible: http://www.freespeech.com/1917-1911M_P22_bible.pdf
My opinion of the P22 puts me in the second category of owners (tolerate and enjoy). It is definitely a fun shooter. I've also decided to keep it until I learn to shoot it consistently and well and then decide if I'm a cat 1 or cat 3 owner.