The full size Px4 Inox brings a fresh look and unique style to the Px4 family, epitomizing functional elegance for the most demanding shooters. The stainless steel slide is bead blasted to a smooth satin finish, ensuring a non-reflective surface that is highly resistant to the elements. The Px4 is built around a modular concept so these pistols can be adapted to different needs. The Px4 features an exclusive, Beretta-designed locked breech with rotating barrel system, reducing felt recoil and muzzle rise. Chrome-lined barrels provide extreme corrosion resistance, as well as ease of cleaning and feature a deeply recessed combat muzzle crown to protect the rifling. The light frame employs a durable fiberglass-reinforced polymer with a military standard 1913 picatinny rail and a modular grip system for a custom fit. The manual lever safety and slide stop lever are both ambidextrous while the magazine release button is reversible.
Specifications :
- Finish: Black
- Type: Pistol
- Action: Single/Double
- Caliber: 9mm
- Barrel Length: 4"
- Capacity: 17+1
- Safety: Ambidextrous Manual, Firing Pin Block
- Grip: Interchangeable Backstraps
- Sight: 3-Dot White
- Weight: 27.7 oz
Caliber Dictionary
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
The 9mm Luger (9X19mm, Parabellum, P08) was developed in Germany in 1902. Widely used in both world wars, it is the most popular pistol cartridge in the world, now widely used by innumerable law enforcement agencies and militaries (including our own) in both pistols and submachineguns. The controversy over its "stopping power" will never go away, but its attribute is that it is much easier to shoot accurately than larger cartridges with greater power...but more recoil. Advancements in bullet design for law enforcement and personal defense have narrowed the gap considerably. The 9mm Luger is a world standard, chambered by virtually all makers of semiautomatic pistols, with a myriad of factory loads. The most standard is probably a 115-grain load at 1160 fps, with common bullet weights ranging from 95 to 147 grains, and +P loads at higher velocity. — Craig Boddington