The IZh-35 (ÃÂÃÂ-35) is a Soviet-designed target pistol for competitive shooting sports (including the Olympic games).
History
The IZh-34 and IZh-35 were designed from 1973âÂÂ1978. In 1976, state tests of the first prototypes were conducted.
In 1979, IZh-34 and IZh-35 replaced previous Soviet standard sport pistols (ÃÂÃÂ-Ã¥à-30 and ÃÂÃÂ-Ã¥à-31).
In 1986 the IZh-35M was designed and began serial production in 1987.
In September 2008, all Izhevsk Mechanical Plant firearms were renamed and IZh-35M got the name MP-35M (Mechanical Plant-35M).
Design
The IZh-35 is a simple blowback design constructed out of steel. The barrel is fixed to the frame.
It has detachable single column box magazine, which is inserted in the grip.
Variants
- IZh-34 (ÃÂÃÂ-34) - first model, 1.2 kg, .22 Short. In 1990, production was discontinued
- IZh-35 (ÃÂÃÂ-35) - second model, 1.34 kg, .22 LR, serial production began in 1978
- IZh-35M (ÃÂÃÂ-35M) - third model, 1.2 kg, .22 LR.
- Walther KSP 200 - IZh-35 with new pistol grip made by Carl Walther GmbH in 1998-2000
Users
- : IZh-35 used as training firearm in police;
- - IZh-35M is allowed as civilian training pistol
- - IZh-35M is allowed as training pistol
- - IZh-35M is allowed as training pistol
- - As of November 2015, almost 95% of all sport shooters in the Russian Federation used IZh-35, IZh-35M or MP-35M target pistols.
- - the import was allowed
- - KSP 200 was used by the Swedish Armed Forces for target practice. Superseded by Pardini SP and Walther SSP.
References
Sources