All Topics  
Browning Hi-Power

 
Browning Hi Power

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Browning Hi-Power



 
 
The Browning Hi-Power is a single-action, 9 mm semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
 pistol. It is based on ideas conceived and patented in 1922 by American firearms inventor John Browning
John Browning

John Moses Browning , born in Ogden, Utah, was an United States firearms designer who developed many varieties of firearms, Cartridge , and gun mechanisms, many of which are still in use around the world....
, and later patented by Fabrique Nationale
Fabrique Nationale de Herstal

Fabrique Nationale de Herstal, more often abbreviated as Fabrique Nationale or simply FN, is a Belgium manufacturer of firearms. The official company name is FN Herstal....
 (FN) of Herstal
Herstal

Herstal is a municipality of Belgium. It lies in the country's Walloon Region and Liege along the Meuse river. Herstal is included in the "Greater Li?ge " agglomeration, which counts about 600,000 inhabitants....
, Belgium
Belgium

* A small German-speaking Community of Belgium exists in eastern Wallonia. Belgium's linguistic diversity and related political and cultural conflicts are reflected in the history of Belgium and a complex Communities and regions of Belgium....
. Browning died in 1926, before he had finished developing a production version. The design was fully developed and realized by Belgian arms designer Dieudonne Saive
Dieudonne Saive

Dieudonn? Joseph Saive was a Belgium small arms designer who designed the FN Model 1949 and the FN FAL. He became the head firearms developer of Fabrique Nationale de Herstal after the death of John Browning....
, working at FN.

The Hi-Power pistol was named for its 13-round magazine capacity, which was almost twice that of contemporary designs such as the Luger
Luger pistol

The Parabellum-Pistole , popularly known as the Luger, is a toggle locked, Recoil operation#Short recoil operation, semi-automatic pistol....
 or Mauser 1910
Mauser

Mauser is a German arms manufacturer, maker of a line of bolt-action rifles and pistols from the 1870s to present. Their designs were built for the German armed forces but have been exported and licensed to a number of countries since the later Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries, as well as being a popular civilian firearm....
.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Browning Hi-Power'
Start a new discussion about 'Browning Hi-Power'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


The Browning Hi-Power is a single-action, 9 mm semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
 pistol. It is based on ideas conceived and patented in 1922 by American firearms inventor John Browning
John Browning

John Moses Browning , born in Ogden, Utah, was an United States firearms designer who developed many varieties of firearms, Cartridge , and gun mechanisms, many of which are still in use around the world....
, and later patented by Fabrique Nationale
Fabrique Nationale de Herstal

Fabrique Nationale de Herstal, more often abbreviated as Fabrique Nationale or simply FN, is a Belgium manufacturer of firearms. The official company name is FN Herstal....
 (FN) of Herstal
Herstal

Herstal is a municipality of Belgium. It lies in the country's Walloon Region and Liege along the Meuse river. Herstal is included in the "Greater Li?ge " agglomeration, which counts about 600,000 inhabitants....
, Belgium
Belgium

* A small German-speaking Community of Belgium exists in eastern Wallonia. Belgium's linguistic diversity and related political and cultural conflicts are reflected in the history of Belgium and a complex Communities and regions of Belgium....
. Browning died in 1926, before he had finished developing a production version. The design was fully developed and realized by Belgian arms designer Dieudonne Saive
Dieudonne Saive

Dieudonn? Joseph Saive was a Belgium small arms designer who designed the FN Model 1949 and the FN FAL. He became the head firearms developer of Fabrique Nationale de Herstal after the death of John Browning....
, working at FN.

The Hi-Power pistol was named for its 13-round magazine capacity, which was almost twice that of contemporary designs such as the Luger
Luger pistol

The Parabellum-Pistole , popularly known as the Luger, is a toggle locked, Recoil operation#Short recoil operation, semi-automatic pistol....
 or Mauser 1910
Mauser

Mauser is a German arms manufacturer, maker of a line of bolt-action rifles and pistols from the 1870s to present. Their designs were built for the German armed forces but have been exported and licensed to a number of countries since the later Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries, as well as being a popular civilian firearm....
. The Hi-Power had the first functional double-column magazine of 9 mm rounds, and was capable of holding 13 cartridge
Cartridge (firearms)

A cartridge, also called a round, packages the bullet, gunpowder and Percussion cap into a single metallic case precisely made to fit the firing chamber of a firearm....
s, with a 14th loaded in the chamber. Flush-fit 15 round magazines are now available, as well as higher capacity magazines which extend past the end of the butt.

The pistol is often referred to as an HP (for "Hi-Power" or "High-Power") or as a GP (for the French
French language

French is a Romance language spoken around the world by around 80 million people as first language, by 190 million as second language, and by about another 200 million people as an acquired tongue, with significant speakers in 54 countries....
 term, "Grande Puissance"). The term P-35 is also used, based on the introduction of the pistol in 1935. Another common nickname is the "King of Nines." It is most often called the "Hi-Power", even in Belgium. It is also known as the BAP (Browning Automatic Pistol), particularly in Irish
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
 service.

Development


The Hi-Power was designed in response to a French military requirement for a new service pistol, the Grand Rendement (French
French language

French is a Romance language spoken around the world by around 80 million people as first language, by 190 million as second language, and by about another 200 million people as an acquired tongue, with significant speakers in 54 countries....
 for "High Yield"), or alternatively Grande Puissance (literally "high power"). The French military's requirements were that the arm should be compact, have a capacity of at least 10 rounds, a magazine disconnect device, an external hammer, a positive safety, be robust and simple to disassemble and re-assemble, and be capable of killing a man at 50 metres; this last criterion was seen to demand a calibre of 9 mm or larger, a bullet mass of around 8 grammes, and a muzzle velocity of 350 m/s. It was to accomplish all of this at a weight not exceeding 1 kg (2.2 lb).

FN commissioned John Browning to design a new military sidearm conforming to this specification. Browning had previously sold the rights to his successful M1911 U.S. Army automatic pistol to Colt's Patent Firearms, and was therefore forced to design an entirely new pistol while working around the M1911 patents. Browning built two different prototypes for the project. One was a simple blowback
Blowback (arms)

Blowback is an operating system for Semi-automatic firearm firearms that uses the pressure created by combustion in the cartridge case and bore....
 design, while the other was operated with a locked-breech recoil system. Both prototypes utilized a new staggered magazine design to increase capacity without unduly increasing the pistol's grip size or magazine length.

The locked breech design was selected for further development and testing. This model was striker-fired
Firing pin

A firing pin or striker is part of the firing mechanism used in a firearm or explosive device e.g. an M14_mine landmine or bomb fuze. Firing pins may take many forms, though the types used in landmines, bombs, grenade fuzes or other single-use devices generally have a sharpened point....
, and featured a double-column magazine that held 16 rounds. The design was refined through several trials held by the Versailles Trial Commission.

In 1928, when the patents for the Colt Model 1911 had expired, Dieudonne Saive
Dieudonne Saive

Dieudonn? Joseph Saive was a Belgium small arms designer who designed the FN Model 1949 and the FN FAL. He became the head firearms developer of Fabrique Nationale de Herstal after the death of John Browning....
 integrated many of the Colt's previously patented features into the Grand Rendement design, in the Saive-Browning Model of 1928. This version featured the removable barrel bushing and takedown sequence of the Colt 1911.

By 1931, the Hi-Power design incorporated a shortened 13-round magazine, a curved rear gripstrap, and a barrel bushing that was integral to the slide assembly. By 1934, the Hi-Power design was complete and ready to be produced. It was first adopted by Belgium for military service in 1935 as the Browning P-35. Ultimately, France decided not to adopt the pistol, instead selecting the conceptually similar Mle. 1935.

Design features

Browning Hp (finnish) With Stock
Browning Sultan of Muscat & Oman Contract Pistol
The Browning Hi-Power has undergone continuous refinement by FN since its introduction. The pistols were originally made in two models: an "Ordinary Model" with fixed sights and an "Adjustable Rear Sight Model" with a tangent-type rear sight and a slotted grip for attaching a wooden shoulder stock. The adjustable sights are still available on commercial versions of the Hi-Power, although the shoulder stock mounts were discontinued during WW2. In 1962, the design was modified to replace the internal extractor with an external extractor, improving reliability.

Standard Hi-Powers are based on a single-action design. Unlike modern double-action semi-automatic pistols, the Hi-Power's trigger is not connected to the hammer. If a double-action pistol is carried with the hammer down with a round in the chamber and a loaded magazine installed, the shooter may fire the pistol by simply pulling the trigger. In contrast, a single-action pistol must be cocked manually before the first shot, either by thumbing the hammer back, or by pulling the slide to the rear and releasing it. In common with the M1911, the Hi-Power is therefore typically carried with the hammer cocked and the safety catch on (a carry mode often called cocked and locked, or sometimes called condition one
Jeff Cooper (colonel)

John Dean "Jeff" Cooper was recognized as the father of what is commonly known as "the Modern Technique of the Pistol" of handgun shooting, and was considered by many to be one of the 20th century's foremost international experts on the use and history of small arms....
).

The Hi-Power, like many other Browning designs, operates on the short-recoil principle, where the barrel and slide initially recoil together until the barrel is unlocked from the slide by a camming action. Unlike Browning's earlier Colt M1911, the barrel is not moved vertically by a toggling link, but instead by a hardened bar which crosses the frame under the barrel and contacts a slot under the chamber, at the rearmost part of the barrel. The barrel and slide recoil together for a short distance but, as the slot engages the bar, the chamber and the rear of the barrel are drawn downward and stopped. The downward movement of the barrel disengages it from the slide, which continues rearward, extracting the spent case from the chamber and ejecting it. After the slide reaches the limit of its travel, the recoil spring brings it forward again, stripping a new round from the magazine and pushing it into the chamber. This also pushes the chamber and barrel forward. The cam slot and bar move the chamber upward and the locking lugs on the barrel reengage those in the slide.

The Hi-Power has two flaws. The standard trigger pull is heavy, especially for a single-action pistol. This disadvantage is a consequence of the Hi-Power's magazine safety design, which was initially added to the model to meet the requirements of the French military in 1935. The standard Hi-Power magazine safety is connected to the trigger and is released by a plunger pressing on the surface of the magazine. This action of the plunger on the magazine adds tension to the trigger pull, and the required force to operate this feature adds resistance as well. This problem is often resolved by removing the magazine safety entirely, thus voiding the pistol's warranty, or by polishing the interface surfaces between the safety plunger and the magazine. After-market trigger springs with reduced tension are also available to improve the trigger pull.

In addition, the pistol has a tendency to "bite" the web of the shooter's hand, between the thumb and forefinger. This bite is caused by pressure from the hammer spur, or alternatively by pinching between the hammer shank and grip tang. Many HP owners fix this problem by altering or replacing the hammer, or by learning to hold the pistol to avoid injury. While a common complaint with the commercial models with spur hammers similar to that of the Colt "Government Model" automatic, it is seldom a problem with the military models, which have a smaller, rounded "burr" hammer, more like that of the Colt "Commander" compact version of the 1911.

Military service

Browning Hi-Power pistols were used during World War II by both the Allied and the Axis powers. Belgium was occupied by the Axis powers early in the war, and FN's plant was seized by Nazi Germany. The German armed forces used the Hi-Power as the Pistole 640(b) ("b" for belgisch, "Belgian"). Examples produced by FN in Belgium under German occupation bear a German inspection and acceptance mark, or Waffenamt
Waffenamt

Waffenamt was the German Army Weapons Agency. It was the centre for research and development of Germany and also during The Third Reich for weapons, ammunition and army equipment to the German Reichswehr and later Wehrmacht....
, such as WaA613.

Hi-Power pistols were also produced in Canada for Allied use, by John Inglis and Company
John Inglis and Company

John Inglis and Company was a Canada firm which made weapons for the United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations military forces during the World War II era, then became a major appliance company....
. The pistol was popular with covert operations and commando groups such as the U.S. Office of Strategic Services
Office of Strategic Services

The Office of Strategic Services was a United States intelligence agencies formed during World War II. It was the wartime intelligence agency, and it was the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency ....
 (OSS) and the nascent British SAS
Special Air Service

The Special Air Service is a special forces regiment within the British Army which has served as a model for the special forces of other countries....
 (Special Air Service) Regiment. In the post-war period, Hi-Powers remained popular among military forces, with over 50 armies (93 nations) issuing this design since its invention. Former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein often carried a Browning Hi-Power, as did many Iraqi military officers.

As of 2007, the MK1 version remains the standard service pistol of the Canadian Forces
Canadian Forces

The Canadian Forces , officially the Canadian Armed Forces , are the unified armed forces of Canada, as constituted by the National Defence Act, which states: "The Canadian Forces are the armed forces of Her Majesty raised by Canada and consist of one Service called the Canadian Armed Forces." This singular institution consists of thre...
, with the Sig Sauer P226
SIG P226

The SIG Sauer P226 is a full-sized, service type pistol chambered for the 9x19mm Parabellum, .40 S&W and .357 SIG. Its design is based on the SIG P220....
 being issued to specialized units along with the Sig Sauer P225
SIG P220

The SIG P220 is a semi-automatic pistol designed in Switzerland by Swiss Arms . It is manufactured in Eckernf?rde, Germany, by Sauer & Sohn....
. The weapon is the standard sidearm of the Belgian Army
Belgian Army

The Land Component , formerly the Belgian Army, is the Army service of the Military of Belgium. The current chief of staff of the Land Component is Major-General Eddy Testelmans....
, British Army
British Army

The British Army is the Army branch of the British Armed Forces. It came into being with the unification of the Kingdoms of Kingdom of England and Kingdom of Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707....
, Indian Army
Indian Army

The Indian Army is the largest branch of the Indian Armed Forces of India and has the responsibility for army military operations. Its primary objectives include defending India from external aggression, maintaining peace and security within the country, patrolling borders and conducting counter-terrorist operations....
, Australian Defence Force
Australian Defence Force

The Australian Defence Force is the Armed forces responsible for the defence of Australia. It consists of the Royal Australian Navy, the Australian Army, the Royal Australian Air Force and a number of 'tri-service' units....
, Argentine Army
Argentine Army

The Argentine Army is the Army branch of the Military of Argentina and the senior military service of the country....
, Irish Army
Irish Army

The Irish Army is the main branch of the Irish Defence Forces . It was first formed in 1922 after the implementation of the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the subsequent foundation of the Irish Free State....
, Luxembourgish Army, Israeli police, Singapore Special Operations Force
Singapore Special Operations Force

The Special Operations Force is part of the Singapore Army's Commandos arm. It is highly trained, and trains regularly with the United States Delta Force, U.S....
 and Venezuelan Army
Army of Venezuela

The Venezuelan Army is a professional armed body of Venezuela. It is the main component in the Military of Venezuela....
, among others. The Irish Army has begun replacing its Browning Pistols (known popularly as BAPs, or Browning Automatic Pistols) with the H&K USP
Heckler & Koch USP

The USP is a semi-automatic pistol developed in Germany by Heckler & Koch of Oberndorf am Neckar as a replacement for the expensive and somewhat complex Heckler & Koch P7 series of handguns....
 automatic in 2007.

Technical Specs of the Mark I

A locked-breech, semi-automatic
Semi-automatic firearm

A semi-automatic, or self-loading firearm is a gun that after being fired, ejects the empty cartridge that has been fired, loads a new cartridge, and cocks itself....
, single-action, recoil-operated pistol. The Browning Hi-Power Mk I uses a 13-round staggered magazine.

Specifications:
  • Caliber: 9 mm
  • Length: 197 mm
  • Barrel length: 118 mm
    • length of rifled part: 100 mm
    • number of grooves: 6
    • direction of twist: right
  • Height (without sight, loaded): 127.5 mm
  • Width (with stocks): 36 mm
    • (without stocks): 25.5 mm
  • Weight (with empty magazine): 0.9 kg
    • (with loaded magazine): 1.060 kg
  • Capacity of magazine: 13 cartridges
  • Modes of fire: Single action
  • Muzzle velocity: 350 m/s
    • v. 12.50: 340 m/s
    • muzzle energy: 50 kgm
  • Safeties: Half-cock notch, manual thumb safety, firing pin block, and magazine disconnect
  • Trigger pull: 7.5 lb
  • Maximum Effective Range: 50 m
  • Dispersion (firing 10 shots with rest)
    • at 15 metres: 95 mm (height 50mm, width 45mm)
    • at 30 metres: 200 mm (height 105mm, width 95mm)
    • at 50 metres: 320 mm (height 170mm, width 150mm)


Models

Genuine Browning Hi-Power P35s are still manufactured by FN Herstal of Belgium and Portugal, and under license by Fabricaciones Militares (FM) of Argentina. The Hi-Power remains one of the most influential pistols in the history of small arms. It has inspired a number of clone manufacturers (including Charles Daly of the Philippines & USA, FEG of Hungary, Arcus of Bulgaria, and others) who borrow features from it, chiefly the linkless cam system. Until recently, FEG made an almost exact clone, but the company now manufactures a version with modifications to the barrel, linkage, and slide stop that are incompatible with genuine Hi-Powers.

  • The original P35, as noted earlier, featured an internal extractor. During WWII, it was manufactured by Inglis of Canada for allied use, and by FN in occupied Belgium for German use. Most Canadian P35s were manufactured with a parkerized finish, while most P35s manufactured in occupied Belgium had a blued finish. The internal extractor was replaced with a more durable external extractor in the early 1960s.


  • The Browning L9A1, a military version of the P35 Hi-Power, is still utilized by several branches of the UK military forces. The Hi-Power was the pistol of choice for the British Special Air Service
    Special Air Service

    The Special Air Service is a special forces regiment within the British Army which has served as a model for the special forces of other countries....
     (Special Forces), throughout the Cold War
    Cold War

    The Cold War was the continuing state of conflict, tension and competition that existed between a number of world powers, including the United States, the Soviet Union, People's Republic of China, France, United Kingdom and those countries' respective allies from the mid-1940s to the early 1990s....
     era.
Browning Hipower 40sw
  • The Mark I is among the best-known models of the P35 developed over the last 50 years. A wide variety of options and features are available on the P35 models. Recently, Hi-Power pistols have become available in the .40 S&W
    .40 S&W

    The .40 S&W is a Rim pistol Cartridge developed jointly by U.S. Repeating Arms Company and Smith & Wesson, two famous American firearms manufacturers....
     and .357 SIG
    .357 SIG

    The .357 SIG pistol Cartridge is the product of Switzerland firearms manufacturer Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft, in cooperation with the United States ammunition manufacturer Federal Cartridge....
     loadings. However, the use of these calibers in guns designed and built for 9x19mm Parabellum has created cases of broken or warped frames. Only Hi-Powers specifically built for these rounds should be used to fire them. The pistols manufactured for these two rounds are easily identified by examining the left side of the slide - a groove is machined into the side of the heavier slide to allow clearance for the slide release.


  • The Mark I Lightweight is a very rare variant of the Mark I made with a lightweight alloy frame. According to Massad Ayoob, these were introduced commercially in the 1950s but never caught on. The Lightweights are only marked with Fabrique Nationales' rollmarks, not Brownings.


  • Mark II is an upgraded model of the original Hi-Power introduced in the early '80s. Some of the upgrades were ambidextrous thumb safeties, nylon grips, 3-dot sights, and a throated barrel.


  • Mark III was another advancement over the Mark II released in 1988, which featured a firing pin safety and grips similar to the M9 pistol
    M9 Pistol

    The M9 pistol, formally Pistol, Semiautomatic, 9mm, M9, is a 9x19mm Parabellum pistol of the Military of the United States adopted in the 1980s....
    . The Standard is an original Hi-Power with the Mark III firing system. The Capitan and Practical are also slightly different configured Mark IIIs.


  • The Practical features a matte-blued slide and contrasting silver-chromed frame. In addition, this model has Pachmayr rubber grips and a rounded Commander-style hammer. The Practical has fixed or adjustable sights, and is available in either 9mm or .40 S&W. Magazines for all Practical models sport Pachmayr base pads; magazines feature a cartridge capacity of 13 rounds in 9mm and a cartridge capacity of 10 rounds in .40 S&W.


  • The HP-SFS (Safe-Fast-Shooting) is a current variation on the Hi-Power Mark III with a modified firing mechanism. After the weapon is loaded, the hammer is pushed forward, which automatically activates the safety catch. When the shooter is prepared to fire, the safety is pressed down with the thumb, releasing the hammer to spring backwards into the usual, single-action position. A similar system is available for modifying Colt M1911A1s. Magazines are interchangeable with the Mark III and others.


  • The BDA and BDAO
    Browning BDA

    The Browning BDA is a 9 mm semi-automatic pistol developed in the early 1980s at the Belgium Fabrique Nationale de Herstal arms factory in Herstal....
     models were first produced in the 1980s by FN. The BDA model is double action, and the DAO model is "double action only," both versions differing from the usual single-action operation of the P35. These designs have been marketed as the HP-DA and BDA. The DA and DAO models retain many features of the P35, and both are available in full-sized and compact versions. Performance of these models is consistent with FN's high standards. These models resemble the P35, but the most distinguishing feature is the extended SIG-Sauer style trigger guard. Many parts are interchangeable with the P35, but the magazines (although similar) are not. The compact versions also utilize shorter magazines.


  • The Browning BDM
    Browning BDM

    The Browning BDM is a semi-automatic pistol designed and manufactured by the Browning Arms Company up until production ceased in 1998. Similar in appearance to Browning's P-35 model "Browning Hi-Power" pistol, the BDM was actually a new design created to compete in service trials as a standard issue pistol for the United States Federal Burea...
     Model is sometimes erroneously attributed as a special model of the Hi-Power family of pistols. However, this is actually a unique pistol design only bearing an external similarity to the Hi-Power. The BDM was produced during the 1990s only in North America by Browning Arms Company
    Browning Arms Company

    Browning Arms Company was founded in Utah in 1927. It offers a wide variety of firearms, including shotguns, rifles, pistols, and rimfire firearms....
    , and not by FN. The Browning BDM (Browning Double Mode) pistol incorporates many features of the BDA model, but can be switched from double action/single action mode to "revolver" mode (DAO) by the flip of a slide mounted switch.


  • Both the DA / DAO models and the BDM model borrow features from the SIG-Sauer SIG P220
    SIG P220

    The SIG P220 is a semi-automatic pistol designed in Switzerland by Swiss Arms . It is manufactured in Eckernf?rde, Germany, by Sauer & Sohn....
     pistols marketed under the name Browning Double Action (BDA) in the 1970s. The Beretta 84 has also been marketed by Browning under the name BDA 380.


  • The Rosario, FM90 and FM95 models are manufactured by FM. The Rosario is an almost exact copy of the Mark II intended for Argentine and Latin American sales. The FM90 was an export model based on the Mark II, but with a "Colt style" slide without the characteristic beveled front end. The FM95 is the current export model based on the Mark III, also with the "Colt style" slide.


  • The Detective is a short-slide HP produced by FM. The Detective slide group is also available without the frame, and is interchangeable with other FM and FN Hi-Power P35s.


Users

  • (National Revolutionary Army era)
  • : Produced under licensed by Pindad under the name P-1 Pistol.
  • *
  • ** - Special Task Force
    Special Task Force

    The Special Task Force is an elite special forces unit of the Sri Lanka Police specializing in Counter-terrorist and Insurgency operations. It was formed in 1983 not as a Armed force force but rather as a highly-specialised police unit....
    *
  • *


External links



Manual