|
Review: Beretta PX4 Storm .40 Cal Pistol
By
Dan Smith - genitron.com
May, 2006
A brief history...
Beretta's firearm manufacturing lineage can be traced back as early as
1526 to an Italian long gun barrel maker. Throughout the centuries since,
the Beretta family created a notable record of excellence in the manufacture
of sporting and hunting rifles. It wasn't until 1915, under the pressure
and needs of World War I, that Beretta began making handguns. By the end
of the 20th century though, Beretta had become one of the world's major
handgun manufacturers. A notable mark of their success was in 1985 when
the US armed forces adopted Beretta's 9 mm Model 92 pistol as their NATO
compliant side-arm. This deal was conditional on the establishment of
manufacturing facilities in the USA, and a factory was built in Accokeek,
Maryland operating under the subsidiary company name, Beretta USA.
For twenty years since the early 70's Beretta had kept with basically
two handgun designs; the tilt-up fixed barrel, open frame blow-back design
of its .22, .25 and .32 caliber small framed Tomcat and Bobcat pistols,
and the notable 9 mm and .40 cal. model 92 and 96 short-recoil pistols
with their wide open frame and falling block barrel locking system. The
.380 cal. Cheetah would take something from both designs. All of them
are hammer-fired double-action variants.
Then in 1994 Beretta introduced an all new design called the "Beretta
Compact Frame Pistol Family". This pistol had an all-enveloping slide
and a unique rotating barrel locking system. It was called the Cougar,
and was available in 9 mm, .40 and .45 calibers. This design was quite
successful.
Not quite as successful in my opinion was Beretta's first endeavor into
a polymer frame pistol, the Model 9000. Introduced in 2000, this design
is a compact frame with a dropping-barrel locking system similar to the
Kahr and Taurus Millennium, and is available in 9 mm or .40 cal. This
compact design suffers from a top-heavy balance and a hard-hitting recoil.
Now as good as the Beretta Cougar's rotating-barrel design was, particularly
for reducing felt recoil, its grip was a little bulky and was a bit too
large for some small hands. It was otherwise though, an extremely accurate
and reliable gun. After over ten years of production the Cougar was eventually
discontinued in 2005.
But that won't be the last we will see of the Cougar. It has been re-incarnated,
enhanced, and has returned as the new polymer framed PX4 Storm.
Specifications
-
Caliber:
.40 Smith & Wesson
Action:
recoil operated semi-automatic
Length:
7.55 in
Width:
1.50 in
Height:
5.51 in
Magazine
Capacity: 14
rounds
Barrel
Length: 4.25
in
Rifling:
6-grooves, RH twist
Trigger:
double-action
Sights:
dove-tailed 3-dot
Weight
without magazine:
25.8 oz
Weight
with empty magazine:
28.9 oz
Weight
Loaded (1+14 rd magazine):
37.0 oz
Features
-
Reinforced fiberglass
technopolymer frame.
Light activated luminescent night sights.
Mil-Std-1913 "Picatinny" accessory rail.
Multiple-sized, reversible magazine release.
Three interchangeable palmswell grip sizes.
Rotating barrel locking system.
Patented Bruniton corrosion-resistant coating.
Internally chromium-plated barrel.
Click HERE
to see the full line of Beretta pistols.
Design
Notes -
First is my gripe, and
it's about quality control. This is the second new product I've reviewed
that has had a quality control problem right out of the box. (Read my
review on the M&P.) This one isn't as bad as the first one. It's not
a miss-fire issue. But it's aggravating none-the-less, especially when
it's an advertised feature of the product. I'm talking about the light
activated luminescent night sights, of which, one of the three white dots
was virtually gone. Not there. Basically a poor paint job. Extremely poor.
And since I had special-ordered the gun, I could foresee the hassle and
delay involved with returning it just to get the sight fixed. So, I decided
to fix it myself, with the help of BrightSights.com.
On to the good points...
The first unique design point of the PX4 is its rotating barrel locking
system. While it's not the first gun ever to use this type of barrel locking
action, the PX4 and its predecessor, the Cougar, are just about the only
guns deploying the design today, with the exception of the SIG-Mauser
M2.
When the slide auto-loads it moves forward scraping a round from the magazine,
inserting it into the barrel chamber. When the slide's breechblock mates
with the recoiled barrel enclosing the round, it begins to push the barrel
forward. As the barrel moves forward with the slide, an angled cam slot
in the bottom of the barrel rides a peg in the fixed central block that
sets in the frame, causing the barrel to rotate about 45 degrees. This
in turn causes lugs in the barrel to rotate into vertical grooves in the
slide, locking the barrel tightly to the breechblock.
When the gun is fired, the recoil reverses the process. The cam slot turns
the barrel until its lugs are free of the slide. Then a stop on the barrel
hits the frame block stopping its rearward motion while the slide continues
and extracts the casing. By channeling part of the recoil energy into
barrel rotation, and by partially absorbing the barrel and slide recoil
shock through the central frame block before it is transferred to the
frame, the PX4 achieves unusually low felt recoil. The positive lock-up
of barrel to slide assures perfect alignment of barrel and sights. The
result is superior accuracy and quicker recovery for the next shot.
Unlike the GLOCK, SA-XD and Smith & Wesson M&P, the PX4 Storm is a traditional
hammer-fired pistol. While this is not necessarily unique to polymer frame
guns (for instance, check out the Ruger P-345 and the HK USP) the PX4's
hammer design is certainly unique. The hammer mechanism of the PX4 Storm
has been designed as a single independent module that can be extracted
from the frame for deep cleaning and maintenance without the use of special
tools.
Of course the new hot feature for polymer frame guns is the interchangeable
palmswell. The PX4 provides a small, medium and large size insert to fit
your particular hand size.
The PX4 is available in three basic firing schemes. The Model F is double-action
(SA/DA) with a slide mounted ambidextrous safety lever that disengages
the trigger and acts as a decocker. The Model G is double-action (SA/DA)
with a slide mounted ambidextrous decocking-only lever. The Model D has
no external safety/decocker, has a spurless hammer that resets to uncocked
after every fire, and thus has a trigger that is double-action-only (DAO).
All models have an internal firing pin safety.
The particular model reviewed here is the .40 caliber Model F. The PX4
is also available in 9 mm with a 17 round double-stack magazine. I could
not find any information as to whether a 357 SIG variant would be available.
The
caliber -
The .40 Caliber Smith
& Wesson (S&W) cartridge was developed as a joint venture between Winchester
and Smith & Wesson in 1989. It was an effort to to create a cartridge
with the same power as the 10mm Norma round that the FBI had just started
using, but in a shorter case. The shorter cartridge would facilitate accuracy
and allow use of a smaller, more comfortable grip frame. The .40 S&W has
become the cartridge of choice for many law enforcement agencies in the
United States. Typical bullet weight for this cartridge ranges from 135
to 180 grains with an average muzzle energy that approaches 500 ft-lbs.
The following data set is based on standard factory loaded cartridges
fired from a 4" barrel, listed by weight, brand, type and muzzle velocity.
This is only a very small sample of what is available.
135 grain Federal JHP: 1,190 Feet Per Second
155 grain Hornady JHP: 1,180 Feet Per Second
165 grain Winchester FMJ: 1,060 Feet Per Second
180 grain CCI-Speer JHP: 1,025 Feet Per Second
Handgun Observations -
The PX4 is well balanced
in the hand. Although the slide assembly isn't as slim and trim as the
Smith & Wesson M&P, it is by no means bulky and in my opinion gives the
gun a more sturdy appearance than the M&P. There is absolutely no rattle
in the gun when shaken, but there was an ever-so-slight play in the rear
of the slide when pressed to the left and right. This is not a complaint.
I have seen much more play in the entire slide of other reliable guns.
The bottom line is that this gun is tight.
Unlike the glossy finish on it's predecessor, the Cougar, the Bruniton
finish on the PX4 slide is more matted, which makes it less susceptible
to fingerprints and reflecting light. The slide's matte finish also blends
in well with the matte finish on the polymer frame giving the gun a uniform
look. The grip serrations on the front and back straps are interesting.
Angled crosshatching forms a mass of tiny little pyramids that definitely
create traction. The gun will not slip or slide in your hand. But, people
with sensitive hands may not be happy with the rasp-like feel.
There is no loaded-chamber indicator. This might have been a nice feature
for some, particularly since the rotating barrel locks so securely into
the slide that it takes over a 1/4 inch of pull on the slide before the
rear of a chambered cartridge is exposed where it can be seen.
Exchanging the palmswell insert is not real easy. It required applying
a large flat-blade screwdriver with a hard and steady pressure to remove
the retaining clip while being particularly careful not to scratch or
mar any of the gun's surfaces. Also, I needed a hard, flat, preferably
wooden or other non-marring surface to press the gun against in order
to re-insert the retaining clip. I used the edge of my shop bench. This
would be much more difficult to do in the field.
Beretta's traditional left side take-down lever has been replaced with
a pair of S&W Sigma-like pegs on both sides of the frame that need to
be simultaneously pulled down to release the slide. This initially troubled
me as those little pegs on my Sigma are so stiff that it's actually painful
and aggravating to take-down that gun. Fortunately this is not the case
for the PX4. The recessed pegs on either side of the pistol only require
a minimal pull to release the slide.
The widest point on the PX4 is at the ambidextrous safety/decocking levers,
which at 1.5 inches across, adds an additional .25 inch to the otherwise
slender gun. Literature on Beretta's website states that on the Model
G variant the levers can be replaced with low profile levers. I'm sure
that would require sending the gun back to the manufacturer. This option
is not provided for the Model F variant. I assume that this is because
the slim profile lever may prohibit a quick single-handed thumb release
from the safe position.
Beretta literature indicates that the standard slide-lock lever can be
replaced with a low profile version. This would help reduce the profile
of the Model D variant which has no safety/decocking levers, or the Model
G variant that has had low-profile decocking levers installed. But, it
wouldn't necessarily help the profile of the Model F variant that is stuck
with standard safety levers.
The slide-lock lever can be easily removed with out any tools. Reversing
the magazine release button is a little bit trickier. It requires the
use of a properly sized drift-punch to fit into a small maintenance hole
in the magazine release button. Beretta literature states that the standard
magazine release button can be replaced with a larger "Combat" button.
The larger button was not included with the gun.
Shooting
-
It's real embarrassing
to stand at the bench at your range and be seen struggling with loading
rounds into your pistol's magazine. But I could not believe how hard it
was to get 14 rounds into the magazines that came with the PX4. It was
nearly impossible to get the last round inserted by bare hand. I let my
range master try it just to see if it was just me, and he met the same
resistance, while uttering disbelief that it was a Beretta magazine. He
pulled out a plastic HKS lever-action loader that happened to fit, but
it broke under the pressure after about five magazine loads. It appears
that the follower binds when pressed downward in the magazine, and it
is additionally aggravated by a spring that gets extremely stiff as it
is compressed by the last few rounds inserted. I was able to relieve the
binding follower with a drop of gun oil, but still that last round is
a bear. Otherwise the magazines had absolutely no problems feeding the
gun.
Go to my new WebBlog page to get more information on my experience with the
Beretta PX4 magazine and what I ended up doing to resolve the stiff magazine
loading problem. Enough said about it here.
Double-action trigger pull measured about 9 pounds with about an inch
of travel before it tripped the sear. In single-action mode the trigger
had about 1/4 inch of take-up before it tripped the sear at just under
4 pounds. The hammer spur is extremely easy to cock, which made it just
as easy to prime the gun for a single-action first shot as it was to just
pull the trigger in double-action mode.
The photo-lumeniscent 3-dot sights were easy to see, and made target acquisition
quick. They are a low cost and effective alternative to the much more
expensive Trijicon style self-illuminating sights. Of course since my
factory sights arrived defective and I have since rebuilt them with the
Bright Sight "Ghost Glow" product, I won't comment on Beretta's claim
that their sights last up to 30 minutes in the dark with just a short
exposure to a light source. This will be very subjective and highly dependent
on the light source and subsequent ambient lighting conditions.
The gun shot like a charm. It was one of the lightest recoils that I have
experienced in a polymer framed .40 caliber gun. The customized grip,
the clear
3-dot sights and SA/DA trigger pull made it easy to get consistently tight
groupings. As much as I like my Beretta Cougar, I have to say that the
PX4 has surpassed it in handling and accuracy.
To view the Poor Shot's
Range Report click HERE.
|
|
Click
on a Pic |