Rogak P18 – A Cautionary Tale of Manufacturing

July 19, 2017  
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Categories: Gear Curious

Ian McCollum wrote for us a few times, but his schedule precluded that from continuing. So, we’re forced to steal his stuff. We kid! We have his permission and his blessing to syndicate his stuff, and like all of our syndicated material, it’s here using a canonical URL. Anyway, let’s get on with it: Les Rogak and the Rogak P18. This article originally appeared online at Forgotten Weapons.  It appears here in its entirety with their permission.  Mad Duo  

The Rogak P18 was a copy of the Steyr GB service pistol, with some disagreement over whether it was unlicensed or just unfortunately made. Les Rogak was a Steyr distributor in Illinois who managed to acquire a set of plans for the GB pistol and put it into production before Steyr-made examples were available in the US. On paper, the gun seemed quite impressive – a stainless steel 18-shot gas-delayed military pistol in the late 1970s was something at the forefront of handgun development.

Unfortunately, Rogak’s manufacturing left a lot to be desired. Where the authentic Steyr GB was an excellent pistol (despite losing to the Glock in Austrian military trials and to the Beretta in American military trials), the Rogak copy was quite poorly made. The fit on the gas delay system was too loose to actually hold gas pressure, resulting in the Rogak acting as a simple blowback pistol. To compensate for this, Rogak added a sort of fiber buffer stack in the receiver to reduce the slide battering on the frame and ground off the extractor claw to prevent the rapid slide opening from tearing cartridge rims off. Numerous burrs, casting defects, and fit problems plagued the guns to the extent that Steyr actually filed a legal suit to stop their manufacture.

It is commonly stated that about 2300 Rogaks were made, but I suspect the number is closer to just a thousand or so, with serial number ranges being manipulated to give the appearance of greater numbers. While I would certainly not recommend any substantial amount of shooting with one, they make for a very interesting piece in a collection – guns of this quality are quite rare to find from US manufacturers!

 

If you have an interest in militaria and historical weapons, you really ought to be following Forgotten Weapons. We don’t read it every day, but we try really damn hard not to miss a post.  To call a resource like this just a blog is too damn it with faint praise. Ian McCollum is an extremely knowledgeable and affable man who is passionate about he does, and it shows. FR is a great resource, and one that is worth supporting. You can do that, if you are so inclined, right here on Patreon — we do! 

You can follow Forgotten Weapons on Facebook (/ForgottenWeapons/). They’re online here.

 

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