What a great day that must of been! Grumpy
Remington Model 514



Good to go!

Building an 1895 Russian Carbine

The Walther PP/PPK is no longer as affordable as it used to be. Prices for pre-war and wartime-production guns are high and getting higher with each passing year, and even post-war examples made in France by Manurhin are creeping toward the $1,000 mark. This economic reality puts owning one of these pistols out of the reach of most budget-minded collectors. Nevertheless, the Hungarians have a cure for the sticker shock confronting buyers shopping for a PP/PPK-type pistol: the PA-63.
By the early 1960s, the Hungarian army was ready to replace its copy of the Soviet TT-33 pistol chambered in 7.62×25 mm Tokarev. Around that time, the Hungarian National Police adopted a successful little pistol, designated the R-61, that was chambered for the Soviet 9×18 mm Makarov cartridge.
With a 3.4″ barrel, it copied the Walther PPK but used a lightweight aluminum-titanium alloy frame. While the R-61 may have been perfect for the Belügyminisztérium (Ministry of the Interior), it was not a great candidate for the army, because it was more of a pocket pistol designed for police use than a service sidearm designed for the military. Engineers at the Fémáru és Szerszámgépgyár NV (Metal Products and Machine Tool Factory Company) in Budapest solved the problem and developed a military-appropriate sidearm by combining the R-61’s lightweight alloy frame with a 4″ barrel in 9 mm Makarov, which is how the PA-63 was born.

The pistol is much like the Walther PP in terms of its fixed barrel, American-style magazine-release button, double-action/single-action trigger and slide-mounted decocking safety. Like the PP, it is also equipped with an internal slide stop that is engaged by the magazine follower. The magazine capacity of the PA-63 is just seven rounds. When combined with the gun’s lightweight frame, the 9 mm Makarov chambering gives the PA-63 a sharp recoil impulse. In addition to that, a heavy double-action trigger pull of almost 10 lbs. means that the PA-63 is not exactly the most comfortable pistol to shoot, but what it lacks in shooting ease it makes up for in reliability.
The PA-63’s rudimentary front and rear sights and its distinctive two-tone finish underscore the fact that this is a military-surplus pistol that was mass-produced with economy of scale in mind. It was still being made in 1975 when Fémáru és Szerszámgépgyár NV became part of an industrial conglomerate known as Fegyver és Gázkészülékgyár (Arms and Gas Equipment Factory), usually just referred to by the initials FÉG. PA-63s continued to come off the FÉG assembly line through the 1980s, but after the collapse of the Soviet Union a new world emerged—one that no longer needed more examples of a snappy little PP clone in 9 mm Makarov. Although the pistol’s production history came to an end in 1990, its employment reached well beyond the Warsaw Pact era.
Even after the end of the Cold War, the Hungarian military continued to use the sidearm until the country ultimately joined NATO in 1999. With NATO membership came requirements to standardize military equipment, including pistols and pistol ammunition. This marked the end of the PA-63’s service history, but then U.S. companies such as Pac West Arms, Century Arms and KBI began importing surplus examples and selling them at a price point lower than any of the surplus or commercial PPs made by either Walther or Manurhin. Consequently, the PA-63 is out there today in large numbers and, because of that volume, can be had at a very reasonable price, making it a great option for the working-class shooter and collector.
Gun: FÉG PA-63
Manufacturer: Fegyver és Gázkészülékgyár (FÉG)
Chambering: 9×18 mm Makarov
Serial No.: L0585XX
Manufactured: 1983
Condition: NRA Excellent (Modern Gun Standards)
Value: $375

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The Army’s activation of a new aviation command in Alaska marks the return of local air control over two battalions in the Arctic region after a five-year hiatus, as the service works to cement its footprint in the High North.
It comes as the United States military in general works to counter Russian presence and Chinese interest in the region.
The 11th Airborne Division, also known as the “Arctic Angels,” stood up its Arctic Aviation Command at Fort Wainwright, Alaska, on Thursday, the Army announced.
The move puts two active-duty aviation battalions under direct control of the command and the 11th Airborne.
Previously, the command’s Alaska-based battalions, 1st Battalion, 52nd Aviation Regiment, and 1st Battalion, 25th Aviation Regiment, reported to units based in Washington state and Hawaii.
Now, the two battalions will exclusively report to the new local command while continuing to support rotary wing operations across the region, Col. Russell Vanderlugt, recently appointed head of the aviation command, told Army Times on Monday.
“The Arctic is obviously a strategically important region in for the United States,” Vanderlugt said. “What’s unique is this is our home, we are not a transient unit, we are stakeholders in the region.”
By living in the region and running aviation operations on site, the colonel said battalion soldiers and crews can work in the extremes of an environment that challenges ground and air assets on a near-daily basis.
“We realize forces can’t just show up in the Arctic and expect to operate here,” Vanderlugt said. “The timing of this thing is critical, there’s a sense of urgency as we continue to transform aviation across the Pacific.”:quality(70)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/archetype/OIHSSH3ZO5CALESK5GMI45WMHQ.jpg)
Th move follows the Pentagon’s release last month an update to the Defense Department’s Arctic strategy, the first since 2019.
Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks said in July that an increased Arctic presence, upgrades to area installations and new equipment — including sensors and space-based technologies — would be crucial.
The Army released its Arctic strategy in 2021, calling for new formations, soldier training and gear for the cold weather climate.
The Army reflagged U.S. Army Alaska as the revived 11th Airborne Division in 2022. In February, more than 8,000 soldiers in Alaska conducted a large-scale exercise across the state.
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