Tag Archives: astra cub

The cute little Colt Junior pocket pistols

Colt bounced back into the Post-WWII mouse gun market with an offering that had some decidedly European origins, yet proved popular enough to keep around for over twenty years.

Early baby Colts

colt pocket 25

Going back to days of when Teddy Roosevelt was in office and movies were silent and lasted about 15 minutes, Colt had a series of small “vest guns” such as the 1903 Pocket Hammer and 1908 Hammerless Model N on the market for the discerning gentleman or lady. These abbreviated blowback action semi-autos, typically in .25 and .32ACP dated from when John Browning was working for the company and were svelte mouse guns that could be slipped into a small handbag for the ladies or waistcoat watch pocket for the men.

Remaining in production in one form or another until World War II, in the late 1940s Colt was looking to bring these popular (they sold more than 400,000) guns back to the line but just couldn’t make headway against inexpensive European guns from Beretta, Astra, Tanfoglio, Star and others being brought in from Europe.

That’s when Colt decided, if you can’t beat them, join them.

Enter the Spanish partner

The firm of Astra Unceta y Cía dated back to 1908 and really came into its own when they made thousands of their .32ACP Victoria model pistols (ironically based on the Colt M1903) during World War I on contract to the French Army and the 9mm Largo Campo Giro for the Spanish Army. In the 1930s and 40s they made and sold trainloads of their Model 400, 600, and 900 series pistols to militaries around the globe. Finally, they had built and sold another Colt clone (of the 1908 Hammerless) as their Model 200 Firecub since 1926.

With such a record of making affordable, yet quality guns, and with an affinity to produce Colts without a license, the teaming of Astra and Colt to make a Colt-branded pocket gun in Europe for the American market seemed a no-brainer.

Design

Instead of rebooting a legacy design, the new Astra-Colt, which would carry the name Junior in production, was a new gun, even if it used old concepts. A semi-auto blowback action pistol, the Junior was simple in layout with an exposed hammer and rounded spur. A 2.25-inch barrel produced a gun that was just 4.4-inches long overall. Compare this today to the revolutionarily small Ruger LCP of 5.16-inches overall and you see just how concealable the Junior was.

Produced in two calibers, .22LR and .25ACP, both used a 6-shot single stack magazine that was comparable in size to a domino piece. With the two caliber offerings, a conversion kit was sold that switched out the top half and enabled the gun to be converted back and forth. (These are rarely encountered today).

Sights were small and fixed, but as the sight radius is about as long as a cigarette, it really didn’t matter. Early models had black rubber grips while later variants had checkered walnut, but both had prominent Colt seals.

Astra's cub was pretty basic

Astra’s cub was pretty basic

Astra put the gun in production for European sales as the Model 2000 Cub in 1954 with plastic grips, a lower level of fit and finish, and in light blue or chrome variants. Production of the nicer Colt models in blue and nickel began in 1958.

And, while mechanically the same as the Cub, the Colt Junior was much easier on the eyes.

colt junior (1)

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

The Springfields that never were: The SA Cat series

Before the X. D. was imported to the U.S., Springfield Armory had a plan for a very different series of handguns. Dubbed the Bobcat, Firecat, and Lynx, these handguns of SA’s “R” series were chambered from .25ACP to .45S&W, but good luck finding any…

The concept

Springfield Armory as we know and love it today sprouted up in the 1960s in Illinois and cut their teeth making M14 series rifles (what we know today as the M1A series) but soon branched out to 1911-style pistols. To liven things up they even imported a modular framed semi-auto from West Germany (the Omega) and a CZ-75 clone in 9mm from Italy (the P9).

With these guns moving out of the stable in the 90s, Springfield wanted something else besides their .45s and, as the X. D. was still unheard of, they went for a trio of very different guns to replace them. Imported as kits from European makers, they were to be assembled in the U.S. with nice extra touches like natty wood grips, park’d finishes and SA roll marks, then distributed through their existing network.

Debuted in their 1992 Catalog, they sounded like a great idea, “The biggest news from Springfield was the introduction of the ‘R’ series pistols. These four guns — the Panther, the Firecat, the Bobcat, and the Lynx — are based on the Astra automatic pistols, but with a few custom modifications, like Commander-style hammers, checkered walnut grips, and low-profile white-dot sights. The Panther comes in 9mm, .40S&W and .45ACP; the Firecat is chambered in 9mm and .40S&W; the Bobcat is made for .380ACP; and the Lynx chambers .25 auto.”

The thing is, it just didn’t work out…

The Astra A-70, I mean the Springfield Armory Firecat!

The Astra A-70, I mean the Springfield Armory Firecat!

Read the rest in my column at X. D. Forum