The Archon Type B is definitely one of those firearms that requires a back story. A few years ago a pistol of very similar design was spotted in use by Russian troops.
That model was known as the “Stryzh” and was the combined brainchild of Italian and Russian design. As much as I loathe claims of low bore axis, the pistol appeared to sit very low in the hand. In fact, it does; more on that later. In 2016, Arsenal Firearms showed a “Stryk” pistol of similar design that would be manufactured in the US in partnership with Salient Arms International. Those guns blipped on the market and then disappeared. There is so much, in fact, that there isn’t a trace of them on Salient’s website. Today, we have the Archon Type B; the sample shown here contains parts from at least three different countries: Germany, Hungary, and the United States. Adding further mystery to our Archon Type B is that the frame is stamped “Made in Germany” and slide “Made in Hungary,” yet earlier samples seen in the hands of media have the opposite.
Are you confused yet? Don’t worry, the Archon gets stranger, and is part of why this author loves this gun.
Archon Type B 9mm Handgun
The low bore axis actually is a thing (in contrast to the visual effect of merely swapping aesthetics a la CZ-style slide-in-frame) thanks to the rather uncommon Bergmann-Bayard action type. This design does not require the barrel to tilt like the Browning action does and so naturally permits and requires the barrel to sit lower in relation to the frame. For a better description of this see the tabletop review video below. Be warned, there is a lot to go over so the video is longer than our norm.
Although sources are a bit shy as to who exactly is making these pistols, logic tells me it is a RUAG product. RUAG is a massive defense company in Europe akin to Northrop Grumman here in the US. They have production facilities in Switzerland, Germany, Sweden, Hungary, Austria, and the United States. Three of those countries are stamped on our pistol. RUAG also owns Geco which is stamped on the underside of our sample’s slide. So we’ve possibly cleared the fog around where the Archon comes from and demonstrated the unique construction techniques, but how does the Type B shoot? Does it hold up to the, “What’s for Dinner?” test of various bullet weights, types, and cases? See the video below for those results.
Interestingly enough, the Archon website lacks the standard jumble of numbers that we are all accustomed to. I find this somewhat of a refreshing discovery, as I’ve never cared for much more than barrel length and capacity. If a gun is good and not steel-framed, I’ll carry it. I have never made a purchase decision for one gun over another because it weighed an ounce or two less or by trigger pull weight. Trigger feel is important; pull weight is silly (within reason). What is on the Archon website are the following features listed:
- Fiber optic front sight with a blacked-out rear cut from billet steel. The slide uses a standard Glock dovetail and front sight for ease of change if preferred.
- Front and rear cocking serrations.
- AF-Speedlock locking mechanism.
- Match-grade traditionally rifled barrel coated in black nitride.
- Three-stage recoil rod with uncaptured mainspring (for ease of service and tuning)
- The inner-frame is milled from billet steel and features full-length rails.
- Integrated beavertail with featured contour to activate tendon in hand for better grip.
- Integrated Picatinny rail for weapon attachments upfront.
- Full metal, flat-faced, short reset trigger.
- An oversized trigger guard is for use with gloved fingers.
- Metal magazine release that is easily reversible for left-handed shooters.
- Innovative Grip Mapping texture designed to actively fight the direction the gun wants to rotate during recoil.
- Integrated magwell.
- Full metal magazine with baseplate designed for ergonomic loading with grid pattern for ease of marking.
The Archon Type B ships standard with the following items:
- Four (4) Magazines
- Malterra designed a high-quality range bag made with 500D Nylon
- Silver AF USA Permanent Marker (for marking magazines)
- EEXOX gun oil
- California Compliant Safety Lock
- User Manual
Archon Firearms and Type B are far from the typical company or product, and it shows.
Rather than yet another Browning-action, striker-fired gun with only slight differentiation from a dozen other guns, they’ve seemingly come out of nowhere and offer something that is actually different. The asking price, just shy of $900, is nothing to sneeze at, but the gun IS different, features European quality, and comes with four magazines. Considering that most European-built magazines run $40 and up, it helps reduce the mind’s perception of cost a bit. The Archon Type B is not inexpensive, but it’s not cheap either.
Live Inventory Price Checker
PTR Archon Type B 9mm 18-Round Magazine | GunMag Warehouse | $ 33.99 $ 29.99 |
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PTR Archon Type B 9mm 15-Round Magazine | GunMag Warehouse | $ 29.99 $ 28.99 |
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PTR Archon Type B Gen 2 9mm 4.30" Pistol - 15/18rds Black Finish, Advanced Performance and Reliability - AF2B-0090105 | Palmetto State Armory | $ 900.99 |
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PTR Archon Type B Gen 2 9mm 4.3 Barrel 15/18-Rounds | GrabAGun | $ 865.99 |
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About Graham Baates
“Graham Baates” is a pen name used by a 15-year active Army veteran who spent most of his time in the tactical side of the Intelligence community including tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. Post-Army Graham spent some time in the local 3-Gun circuit before becoming a full-time NRA Certified defensive handgun instructor and now works as an industry writer while curating a YouTube channel on the side. Visit Graham on Youtube .
Graham Baates” is a pen name used by a 15-year active Army veteran who spent most of his time in the tactical side of the Intelligence community…” Good opsec, “Graham”!
I’d be interested in any field craft that we could incorporate if current conditions deteriorated.
Yes, what is the “tactical side of the intelligence community”?
Is that like James Bond using a PPK once in awhile?