Radom PW wz.33 Tokarev 7.62x25, 1952 Circle 11 Polish Production, Blued, 4.6 in Barrel, 8+1, CAI Import
This Radom PW wz.33 is a Polish-licensed Tokarev-pattern pistol produced in 1952 at the Circle 11 factory. It is chambered in 7.62x25mm Tokarev and retains its classic, blued carbon steel construction with black bakelite grips. Marked by Century Arms International with a frame-mounted manual safety added at import, it comes with two magazines and a brown leather flap holster.
Condition
Overall Condition: Good condition, showing some signs of prior use and handling.
Bore Condition: Good - Clean, well-maintained, minor wear marks.
Bore Rifling: Good Rifling - Intact, well-defined lands and grooves.
Specific Condition Notes: There is surface rust and visible signs of use and wear throughout. The bore shows surface carbon and some rust.
What’s Included
- 2x 8-round steel TT-33/Tokarev-pattern magazines with witness holes (one floorplate stamped '1117')
- Brown leather flap holster
Produced at Radom and marked with the Circle 11 factory code, this PW wz.33 reflects Polish manufacture of the Tokarev design in 1952. The slide is marked with the year, and the pistol carries Century Arms International import markings identifying its origin and model.
It uses the 7.62x25mm Tokarev cartridge and operates via a single-action, short-recoil, locked-breech system. The standard 4.6 in barrel and 8+1 single-stack capacity pair with fixed blade front and fixed notch rear sights. Rear slide serrations and an external hammer retain the familiar Tokarev-style controls.
Construction is blued carbon steel for both frame and slide. The grips are black bakelite panels with vertical grooves and a star medallion. A lanyard loop at the butt is present, consistent with service-pattern features.
Import markings read "C.A.I. GEORGIA VT. MADE IN POLAND MDL. TTC CAL. 7.62x25." An import-added, frame-mounted manual safety is installed to meet import requirements while keeping the pistol’s original character intact.
Included are two steel 8-round magazines with witness holes, and a brown leather flap holster. One magazine floorplate is stamped "1117."




