Tag Archives: IM Metal

Is a HS2000 an XD or is an XD a HS2000?

If you are a Springfield X.D. shooter, owner, or enthusiast, odds are you have bumped into the term “HS2000” in your travels. You may have even heard speculation that the HS2000 is the X.D. Well, we are here to bust the myths and shatter the misconceptions.

Back in the (former) People’s Republic of Yugoslavia, there was a group of engineers in the state of Croatia who banded together to form a company called IM Metal just as the hard-working Croats decided to pack up their stuff and break away from being under the Yugo banner. This was in the early 1990s.

The IM Metal gang built a series of pistols for the young and embattled Croatian military, the Walter P-38-ish PHP and the SIG P220-ish HS95.

By 1998, the company, enjoying a peace dividend and able to design firearms without worrying about their country being invaded any minute, had created the first ever polymer-framed handgun in Croatia. Using extensive CAD/CAM techniques the company used a BASF based Ultramyd 66 material for the polymer lower, a very close SIG-style internal mechanism yet with a striker fired trigger system, and, unique in its class, a rear grip beavertail safety.

The prototypes had been worked out by the verge of the millennium and the HS2000 was born. As a step to support their new and innovate product, the company even changed its name from IM Metal to HS Produkt. All it needed next was a big market.

HS-45ACP-TACTICAL-MK
Read the rest in my column at X.D. Forum

The Springfield XD’s Weird Croatian Grandpa

Those of you who have ever looked at the slide of a Springfield  have long ago realized that the pistol was made in a faraway land by the name of Croatia. There, the gun started life in 1999 as the HS2000 pistol. However, what you may not know is that the old HS owed its beginnings to a weirder looking design that preceded it.

The Balkan European country of Croatia is famous for inventing the necktie, and saving Europe a few times from Turkish invasions, among other things. Croatian immigrants (Nikola Tesla included) helped build the modern United States and their descendants here include such well-known persons as Nick Saban, Eric Bana, and John Malkovich.

Once part of the polyglot People’s Republic of Yugoslavia (and before 1918 the Austro-Hungarian Empire), Croatia had to fight for its independence in the 1990s.

More than 12,000 Croats died in a four-year period before their country stood as a free nation. Among those veterans of that conflict were Ivan Abcic and Marko Vukovic. The pair set about producing pistols for the struggling Croatian army during the war from their company known as IM Metal.

And what they came up with was a little…different.

The PHP MV17. Weird enough for you?

The PHP MV17. Weird enough for you?

Read the rest in my column at X     D Forums

Are XDs really made in Croatia

Springfield Armory’s XD series combat pistols have been popular in the US for nearly a decade. Prominently marked on the side of each slide are the words: Made in Croatia.

So what’s the deal with that? Are XD pistols really made in Croatia, and moreover, who makes them?

Read the rest in my column at the XD forums