Almost a month ago I purchased a used Tisas Fatih but when it was shipped to my FFL the zip code had two numbers transposed. That lead to what the Dead called "A Long Strange Trip". About two weeks after it was scheduled to arrive at my FFL the little pistol showed up. However the local indoor range is closed right now for cleaning and lead abatement so I've had a chance to do a cleaning and inspection of my Tisas Fatih.
Some basics.
First about the name; "Fatih" is the district in Istanbul/Constantinople.
The pistol is a licensed version of the Beretta 84, specifically the BB version of the Cheetah. It's a dual stack 9mm Corto/.380 and came with two 13 round Mecgar magazines that appear to be the standard Mecgar Beretta 84 magazines but with a slight different base profile. It has an aluminum alloy frame and steel slide and is DA/SA. Weight with a loaded magazine is 1 pound 7 ounces. The DA trigger pull (10 pull average using my Lyman digital trigger pull gauge) was 4 pounds 13 ounces and SA was 1 pound 9 ounces. The DA pull is long and very smooth while the SA is short and really crisp with a reasonable reset both tactile and audible.
The sight picture is a SnowMan, single larger dot in back and single smaller dot in front. Will report on how that does once the range opens. It's easy to reach all the controls and has an ambi safety.
Internally it has a firing pin block that gets raised when trigger is fully to the rear and the safety puts the trigger in a free mode that does not connect hammer or sear or the firing pin block making it somewhat safer than my 81 7.65 version. It does not have a decocker but the firing pin block does make lowering the hammer on a live round slight safer.
Take down is just like the rest of the Cheetah family; press button on left and rotate lever on right. The only difference I've found is the recoil spring is about a million times heavier than the 7.65 version. Reassembly has the same issues as the 81; make sure the recoil spring is seated in the right spot and that the barrel is seated fully in the slide and it's easier if you reassemble with the hammer cocked.
Overall I'm impressed by the fit, finish and lack of machining marks, on the uniformity of the coating (Ceracote?) and a total lack of obvious cost cutting signs. Once the range gets opened I'll add a range report.
Some basics.
First about the name; "Fatih" is the district in Istanbul/Constantinople.
The pistol is a licensed version of the Beretta 84, specifically the BB version of the Cheetah. It's a dual stack 9mm Corto/.380 and came with two 13 round Mecgar magazines that appear to be the standard Mecgar Beretta 84 magazines but with a slight different base profile. It has an aluminum alloy frame and steel slide and is DA/SA. Weight with a loaded magazine is 1 pound 7 ounces. The DA trigger pull (10 pull average using my Lyman digital trigger pull gauge) was 4 pounds 13 ounces and SA was 1 pound 9 ounces. The DA pull is long and very smooth while the SA is short and really crisp with a reasonable reset both tactile and audible.
The sight picture is a SnowMan, single larger dot in back and single smaller dot in front. Will report on how that does once the range opens. It's easy to reach all the controls and has an ambi safety.
Internally it has a firing pin block that gets raised when trigger is fully to the rear and the safety puts the trigger in a free mode that does not connect hammer or sear or the firing pin block making it somewhat safer than my 81 7.65 version. It does not have a decocker but the firing pin block does make lowering the hammer on a live round slight safer.
Take down is just like the rest of the Cheetah family; press button on left and rotate lever on right. The only difference I've found is the recoil spring is about a million times heavier than the 7.65 version. Reassembly has the same issues as the 81; make sure the recoil spring is seated in the right spot and that the barrel is seated fully in the slide and it's easier if you reassemble with the hammer cocked.
Overall I'm impressed by the fit, finish and lack of machining marks, on the uniformity of the coating (Ceracote?) and a total lack of obvious cost cutting signs. Once the range gets opened I'll add a range report.