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Felk TF919: Australia and Spain Team Up to Make a Lousy Pistol (ad-free)

Edward Felk was an Australian who decided to produce semiauto pistols in Australia. In 1994 he patented a couple features of his new design, and set about finding a way to produce it. He ended up subcontracting with Star of Spain to produce barrels and slides, while the polymer frames were produced in Australia. The Star parts were pretty well done, but the frames were fairly poor quality. The original translucent polymer magazines were also a problem; they tended to crack.  

The first version of the gun was the TF919 in 9mm (also the TF400 in .40S&W), with an open slide reminiscent of the Beretta family, and a manual safety lever that pivots out the back of the trigger itself. A second pattern (the MTF919 and MTF400) came out in the late 1990s and used a more conventional closed slide and a Glock-like conventional trigger safety.  

All of the patterns are quite scarce today, as the whole project was a commercial failure.

Felk TF919: Australia and Spain Team Up to Make a Lousy Pistol (ad-free)

Comments

This gun looks like a child drew their idea of a pistol after watching a bunch of movies and playing a bunch of video games.

Jerry Harkins

that trigger safety is horrible. screams click if there should be bang. sights seem fine. the slide... well not the worst looking.

Guido Schriewer

Yet another reason why I Deeply Despise Tupperware guns!!! 🤠👍

Paul Beck

Thanks for the show and tell. I had never seen one of those Felk's. I have never seen polymer lowers made ,But aren't they made in an injection Mold as One piece .The seam we all see is from the trimming of the lower.

Fred V PATTERSON

I wasn't able to find any numbers, unfortunately.

Forgotten Weapons

How many do you reckon they made in total?

Thomas Batha

New South Wales - That about sums it up.

Kenneth Marshall

Felking hell! I'll take my stubby holder and let myself.

Minion


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