Pindad G2

The Pindad G2 is a 9×19mm Parabellum handgun designed and produced by Pindad.

Pindad G2
A Pindad G2 Combat pistol
TypeHandgun
Place of originIndonesia
Service history
Used bySee Users
Production history
DesignerPindad
ManufacturerPindad
VariantsPindad G2 Elite, Pindad G2 Combat
Specifications
Mass0.95 kg unloaded
Length221 mm (G2 Elite)
200 mm (G2 Combat)
Barrel length127 mm (G2 Elite)
114 mm (G2 Combat)

Cartridge9×19mm Parabellum
ActionRecoil operated semi-automatic
Feed system15-round magazine
SightsIron

Uniquely, the name "G2" is pronounced in English and is meant to be a pun for the Indonesian word "jitu" (literally means "accurate") which is also pronounced the same. The name may also indicate the gun's accurate performance in the range.

History

On June 1, 2018, Pindad announced that it has entered into a partnership with Bhukhanvala Industries to market the G2 to Indian military and law enforcement agencies.[1]

Design details

The Pindad G2 Combat Pistol is a recoil-operated semi-automatic handgun utilizing a John Moses Browning style tilting barrel mechanism. This mechanism harnesses the recoil of the fired round to push the slide rearwards. As the slide moves to the rear, it: a.) ejects the spent cartridge case, b.) compresses the recoil spring, c.) tilts the breech end of the barrel down to receive a new round and d.) cocks the hammer. The slide is then pushed forward by the recoil spring. As the slide moves forward, it: a.) extracts a new round from the magazine and b.) pushes the round into the chamber and c.) tilts the breech end of the barrel up into battery under the action of a cam on the barrel. The tilting action locks the breech to the slide. Since the firearm is single-action only, the hammer cannot be cocked by squeezing the trigger, but must initially be cocked to fire the first round by manually cycling the slide. Since this pistol has an exposed hammer, the hammer can also be manually cocked for a second strike in the event of a misfire.

Users

  •  Brunei: Used by Bruneian soldiers due to compete in the AARM 2020 competition.[2]
gollark: > without a creation there is no world staying aliveAgain, please actually explain this?
gollark: But it would be nice if you would explain how this god interferes to keep the world from imploding or something.
gollark: You can't have an *omnipotent* god at least, because of the obvious paradox. A basically-omnipotent one is fine, though.
gollark: Not just "chemistry would be slightly different" or something.
gollark: To some extent, sure, but I think some of it is "if this physical constant was wrong stars wouldn't work" and such.

References

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