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Wa Western Arms Beretta M92Fs Full Auto Centurion

Wa Western Arms Beretta M92Fs Full Auto Centurion

Regular price $446.65
Regular price Sale price $446.65
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[Fully automatic handgun = machine pistol.]

A machine pistol is categorized as a handgun capable of fully automatic shooting.
The boundary between machine pistols and compactly designed submachine guns, which are the mainstream equipment of modern special forces, etc., is said to be blurred. machine pistol can be classified as a variation based on a handgun.

[Raging Carry Guns, Fully Automatic Centurions.]

Machine pistols, although developed for military and police use, have not become mainstream in the field and are considered special-purpose equipment.
The reason for this is that, despite weighing around 1 kg, the full-automatic rate of fire is high, making it difficult to control and requiring advanced training to master.

However, in the world of action movies and video games, it is often treated as an invincible weapon because of its special functionality.

Therefore, WA offers a tactical machine pistol based on the Beretta M92FS Perfect Version, which has an established reputation as a first-class weapon in terms of weight, realism, and operating performance, and incorporates the customization required for modern professional use.

[Equipped with a 4.25-inch slide.]

The slide assembly uses the 4.25-inch Centurion slide, the only toy gun modeled by WA. It is built as a short-barreled model for easy indoor handling and draw from a holster.

Forward cocking serrations have been added to the front section. The front section has forward cocking serrations for easy operation when loading the first round and to give it a tactical appearance.

The dovetailed front sight is equipped with a fiber optic that fluoresces red under a light source.
Combined with the white-pointed Novak low-mount rear sight, it provides an excellent sight picture.

The robust rear sight with snag-free form combines a practical feature that prevents deformation as much as possible, even if impact is applied, since the sight itself is wedge-shaped.

Many modern machine pistols and compact submachine guns have ported barrels and muzzle brakes to improve control during full-auto fire.
The WA Centurion Full Auto also has a silver-colored outer barrel with STAINTESS markings on the top surface and six exhaust holes, three on each side, pointing diagonally upward.

A full-length steel guide rod assists the reliable extension and retraction of the high-speed driven recoil spring while providing top-heavy balance.

[The frame is constructed with a railed frame.]

The frame adopts the M9A1 type equipped with a 20mm wide Picatinny rail in the dust cover section to accommodate various accessories such as a weapon light.
Three slits have been added to accommodate various attachments, and the tip has been panel-cut to customize it to tactical and carry gun specifications.

Checkering has been added to the front and back straps, and the base of the small beavertail has been shaped with a high-grip cut to provide excellent hold.

The left and right grip panels are newly introduced slim-carry type with the center portion trimmed off.
The blacked-out stone finish, which feels rough on the gripped palm, gives the pistol an aggressive presence.

Overall length: approx. 200 mm
Barrel length: approx. 89 mm
Weight: approx. 988 g
Weight: approx. 988g ● Load capacity: 25+1 rounds
Product code: WA-BTWS
Limited production
Perfect version specification
Precision 6.03mm variable hop-up barrel
Carbon black HW slide and frame
  Carbon black HW slide and frame
The magazine is not N.L.S. specification.

The first machine pistol to be put into practical use is said to be the M1912/P16, based on the Steyr-M1912, which was the official pistol of the Austro-Hungarian army during World War I. It was developed in 1916, and only 960 guns were manufactured.

After that, the German company Mauser developed the Schnellfeuer (meaning "rapid-firing") in 1932, based on the C96, which was the world's first commercially successful automatic pistol. The Russian military introduced the Szczeckin (APS) as its official equipment in 1951.

The Italian company Beretta also manufactured the M951R as a variation of the M1951 military pistol, the prototype of the M92FS, as anti-terrorism equipment for special forces in the 1960s.

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