Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansas-made PPKs set to ship

Walther’s Fort Smith unit rolling out the popular pistols

- JOHN MAGSAM

FORT SMITH — The iconic and sleek Walther PPK is considered one of the most easily identified pistols in history and now is being built in Arkansas at the gun-makers’ U.S. headquarte­rs.

The pistol is commonly called a classic by experts and casual gun-owners alike. It gained cache as a trophy taken by World War II GIs fighting in Europe and later cemented its pop and gunculture legacy as the firearm carried by fictional super-spy James Bond.

But since 2014 there has been no production of the PPK or PPK/S in the U.S. Before that, Maryland-based Smith and Wesson made the pistol for Walther under contract beginning in 1998.

Bret Vorhees, director of product developmen­t for Walther Arms — the American branch of Germany-based Carl Walther GmbH, — said it was time to bring the pistol’s production back in-house where the company can make sure quality is top-notch. He said plans are to add machining capability over the next 18 months so the company can build more and more of the pistols components in Fort Smith. Currently most of the parts are supplied by thirdparty vendors.

Walther recently opened up for orders on the pistols and its first year of production is already spoken for, Vorhees said. Pistols are expected to ship by the end of January.

“That’s a comfortabl­e place to be,” he said.

A small station at Walther’s operation allows the assembly of the pistols. At peak efficiency, a single worker can build, test fire, clean, and prep 35 pistols for shipping in a day’s time. Vorhees said about 20 workers, including some temporaril­y employed during peak demand periods, will be hired to build the pistols for sale by the company’s more than 5,000 dealers.

Greg Cornett, director of manufactur­ing for Walther, said the company is focused on using lean manufactur­ing practices to keep the assembly process streamline­d and easily scalable. He said it takes about three days to train a worker to assemble the pistols.

Cody Osborn, marketing manager for Walther Arms, said plans are for Walther to expand the number and type of firearms it builds in Fort Smith and the lessons learned with the assembly of the PPK and the PPK/S pistols will be invaluable going forward.

“This is just a baby step,”

he said.

Walther’s PPK is a small, semi-automatic pistol chambered in .380 ACP. The pistol’s magazine holds six rounds and it is available in blue or stainless steel. The PPK/S is a similar pistol, only slightly larger and has a magazine with a seven-round capacity. Both models are shipped with two magazines and have a suggested retail price of $749. Typically gun-buyers pay less from a retailer.

Michael Bane, television host and producer with The Outdoor Channel for programs including Shooting Gallery and The Best Defense said the PPK was developed by Walther and released in 1930. It was carried by police and some branches of the German military during World War II.

Import of the pistol was banned under the Gun Control Act of 1968. The PPK/S, a slightly larger version, was developed to allow import under the 1968 law. Later, in the 1980s the PPK was built in the U.S. under various licensing agreements.

For decades, the Walther brand has been closely linked with James Bond. In films, the spy created by author Ian Fleming, traded a Beretta pistol for his signature Walther PPK in Dr. No, which hit theaters in 1962. In the movies, Bond carried the PPK and other Walther pistols on and off for the next 50 years and change, including the Walther PPK/S in 2012’s Skyfall and 2015’s Spectre. Bond’s introducti­on to the PPK in Dr. No is available at arkansason­line. com/113drno.

Bane said the PPK and the PPK/S really caught on with Americans after it was linked so closely with Bond and his jet setting lifestyle. He said over the years it’s become a popular pistol with gun owners who are seeking a statement-making firearm that has a certain flair. He noted it’s been very popular with celebritie­s over the years, including Elvis Presley.

Bane said the PPK’s gravitas certainly will be attractive in today’s concealed-carry pistol market, which is flooded with black, polymer guns that are seemingly identical to untrained eyes. He called most of today’s pistol offerings prosaic — functional and practical but with all the style of a concrete block.

“In today’s marketplac­e everything is about fashion,” he explained. “After a while a gun owner thinks ‘Wouldn’t it be great to have something classic?’ and let’s face it, the PPK is classic.”

Ashley Hlebinsky, the Robert Woodruff curator of Cody Firearms Museum in Wyoming, said much like the Thompson submachine gun, the Walther PPK’s image and reputation goes far beyond its humble origins. The Thompson, like the PPK, was initially used by police but through newspapers and films soon became identified as the gun of choice for mobsters. The PPK owes its broad recognitio­n and pop-culture appeal in great part to the Bond films.

“You recognize a Tommy Gun and you recognize James Bond’s gun,” Hlebinsky noted.

In the U.S., gun sales were solid in 2018. The FBI reported National Instant Criminal Background checks for 2018 through November totaled 23.6 million. With December’s checks still to be tabulated, 2018’s checks are higher than the total for 2015, the thirdhighe­st yearly total since 1998 when tracking began. Total checks in 2017 stood at 25.23 million, the second-highest number on record, trailing 2016 with 27.54 million, the highest total to date. While the FBI background check figures don’t represent the number of guns sold one for one, they are generally used as indicators of firearms demand.

Over the next five years U.S. gun and manufactur­ing’s growth will be linked primarily bluish “daylight” LED lights to softer yellow ones.

It took some technical know-how to implement those broad ideas. But the final results have been endorsed by the Permian Basin Petroleum Associatio­n, Texas Oil and Gas Associatio­n and the American Petroleum Institute. The Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates the industry, has previously sent dark-skies informatio­n to drillers near the observator­y, and a spokesman said there are plans to do so again.

“Without mitigation, the gleam of light from oil and gas operations could compromise the research for which the McDonald Observator­y is famous,” the railroad commission wrote in a 2016 letter to operators.

Apache Corp. has implemente­d those best practices on all sites near the observator­y. Buy-in from Apache was critical since its 350,000-plus-acre Alpine High discovery is the closest field to the observator­y. In late December, Apache had seven active drilling rigs there.

Marcus Bruton, manager of health, safety and environmen­t for Apache, said he was skeptical at first of this dark-skies effort. The convention­al wisdom in the oil patch, he said, was that more light was better.

“I had to see it for myself,” Bruton said. “I had to see the light properly aimed and illuminati­ng the location the way that they do before I really believed it.”

Now, Bruton said, he and the rest of the company are convinced. Dark-skies lighting is now part of new employee and contractor orientatio­ns.

to defense spending, according to a report from market research group IBIS World. Revenue is expected to climb by about 2.3 percent a year to $19.6 billion. The segment not only includes arms and ammunition used by civilians but also machine guns, ammunition and other gear sold to the military.

The report predicts military spending will be a key component of revenue growth over the next five years. The report also notes that over the next five years the market share of the industry aimed at civilian consumers is expected to decline as gun buyers are anticipati­ng less focus on new regulation­s. Typically, demand is driven in part by fear of new, stricter gun regulation­s.

“The reduced chances of new regulation will mean that people will be less likely to purchase new industry products at the same rate as in the previous five-year period,” according to the report. “This will likely help to normalize demand in the near term, causing fewer sales or at least keeping growth to a minimum. However, if prospects for stricter federal regulation­s increase, an increase in demand may return. Events in 2018 have already brought back discussion­s of stricter laws and new regulation­s.”

According to the 2018 Firearms and Ammunition Economic Impact Report compiled by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, Arkansas had 3,061 jobs directly related to the firearms industry in 2017, with annual wages of $102.6 million. Arkansas ranks second in the nation in total economic output per capita and sixth for total jobs per capita dependent on the firearms industry, according to the report. Nationally there are a little over 149,000 jobs directly related to the industry with total wages of $6.1 billion. The National Shooting Sports Foundation is a trade associatio­n for the firearms industry.

The company’s in-house staff checks more than 1,000 lights a week to ensure that they’re compliant.

Bruton said that when 100 percent compliance was announced at a staff meeting for the first time, there was a round of applause.

“When you get ’em all, that’s when you know that it’s more than just an initiative, it’s more than just something we talk about,” he said. “It’s in your culture.”

Although big, influentia­l players are on board, the Permian Basin is filled with countless drillers and contractor­s. And the efficiency of lighting rigs isn’t necessaril­y a foremost concern when scrambling for position in a booming oil field.

Wren jokes that it’s “one down, 1,000 to go.”

“We know the activity is growing closer,” he said. “It’ll be all the way down to Big Bend before all is said and done. … They’ve gotten so good at directiona­l drilling that they can pretty much get to anything.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF ?? Greg Cornett, director of manufactur­ing for Walther, describes the first steps in assembly and testing of a PPK pistol at the Walther Arms site in Fort Smith.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF Greg Cornett, director of manufactur­ing for Walther, describes the first steps in assembly and testing of a PPK pistol at the Walther Arms site in Fort Smith.
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF ??
NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF

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