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REVIEW: Umarex Legends Makarov Ultra Air Pistol

The Umarex Legends line-up of action CO2 pistols now has another worthy member. It is a spitting image of none other than the redoubtable Makarov PM semi-auto pistol developed in the old Soviet Union. This replica is a CO2 powered handgun with a realistic blowback action. Its solid metal frame and slide adds realism in both sound and feel as it cycles with each fired round. The drop-free magazine of the Makarov Ultra holds 16 rounds and a 12 gram CO2 capsule, which powers this handgun's ability to propel steel BBs at 350 feet per second, is housed within the grip. This air pistol have fixed front and rear sights, manual safety and an all metal frame. Very accurate from 30-35 shots at 20-25 ft. The Umarex Makarov Ultra is an ideal low-cost training pistol also adding quite of bit of realistic fun for recreational shooting practice, due to the recoil of the slide as it cycles.

Airgun Specifications:
  • Brand Umarex Legends
  • Caliber 0.177" (4.5mm)
  • Max Velocity 350 fps
  • Loudness 4-Medium-High
  • Barrel Length 3.5"
  • Overall Length 6.38"
  • Shot Capacity 16
  • Barrel Smooth bore
  • Front Sight Blade
  • Rear Sight Fixed
Airgun Features:
  • Scopeable No
  • Suggested for Plinking/Fun
  • Action Semiautomatic
  • Safety Manual
  • Powerplant CO2
  • Function Repeater
  • Trigger Action Single-Action
  • Body Type Pistol
  • Fixed/adj. power Fixed
  • Weight 1.4 lbs

More information about this product.


Additional Umarex Legends Makarov Ultra Photos


Amazon.com Product and Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
2Seems great at first, but then problems show themselves.
By Adam Timmins
This gun seemed great at first and I was very excited about it. I have always been interested in the real Makarov firearm, but I didn't want to have to stock another caliber that isn't readily available, so I thought a bb gun replica would be a worthy substitute. There were several things that I liked about it;
1. All metal construction: this gives it realistic feel and weight
2. Blowback action: it is a fun addition that adds to the realism.
3. It field strips just like the actual firearm

However, after shooting about 500 rounds and using it for a while, I found more things that I didn't like that just kind of killed the experience for me.
1. The plastic grips are very cheap and low quality. They come loose from the factory and move around as you grip the pistol. If you try to tighten the screw that holds them in it will just break and crack the grips. I called Umarex to get a replacement grip and they do not stock the part. They told me to return the whole gun under warranty. I had to pay shipping, which was about $10, and it took over two weeks to get it back. Very poor communication from them. The grips on the replacement gun broke the same way after 100 rounds. I finally just returned it as defective to Amazon.
2. It shot about 6-8 inches low at 10 yards. The front sight is not very tall to begin with, so I don't think that you would be able to file it down enough to get it to shoot where you are aiming.
3. The trigger pull is atrocious. It is very heavy, probably at least 8-10 pounds, and very long. It is weird because the gun is single action only. If you try using this as a substitute or training aid for a real firearm, it won't satisfy very well.
4. The way the loading system is designed is very odd. The first half of the trigger pull moves the bb past the detent into position, and the second half fires the bb. This means that if you pull the trigger half way, then release it, the next trigger pull will double feed and you will shoot two bbs. If the trigger has been pulled more than half way, there is nothing to stop the bb from rolling out the barrel, so you end up shooting nothing but air if you point the gun down while holding the trigger part way. Also, the trigger pull gets very hard half way through as the bb pushes past the detent. It feels like two separate stages and is not realistic at all to any firearm that I have ever shot.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
3Great except for accuracy.
By Consumer, His options many
I want to start by saying that this gun got a 3 star simply because of a lack of accuracy past 10 feet. Otherwise its a great gun.

The gun is great at looking and feeling real. One of the best qualities. Its sliding action is realistic and pleasing. The blowback feature is awesome. The gun has a nice weight and the kick feels not too wimpy but not too strong.

The gun has almost no accuracy beyond 10-15 feet. After that, the bb will curve outward from where you were aiming in any one of 360°. At 20 feet, it has a 3foot spread. At 10, it has an 8inch spread. You get the idea. So for self defence at around 10 feet you could plug someone a good 10 shots within a few seconds. Nothing further away than that. If you want this thing to be accurate walk away. Check out the more expensive models like 100+. CHECK FOR TEST FIRE VIDEOS. There are some veryy accurate models on Amazon. This is not one of them.

I want to note how realistic the system is on this gun. It is gas powered, but there is no spring used. The hammer hits a release valve that fires the bb and blows back the slide. This is very close to how real firearms operate. I thought it was a nice touch.

So if youre looking for a fun piece, realistic in many ways, fit for gun training even, this is your gun. It is not accurate past 10 feet. It runs through a CO2 cannister in about 30 shots, the best shots stop around the first clip. If you hold the gun upside down while firing, it fires with more gas but I think this is bad for the gun, often the gas will escape as ice and it never does that upright. But its a way to get a few more shots out of the gun.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
43.5 stars. It's fun, it can shoot accurate with effort (long trigger), good replica feel minus the water gun grip.
By Mark T Jung
3.5 stars. I should qualify this review as someone new to this type of plinking BB pistol; so to set your expectation, this is far from a pro review. But I didn't see many write ups on this new model and thought to take some time to share my impressions in hopes that this may help some of you.

The slide, frame, hammer, slide release and overall weight of the gun, a solid C+ to a B in terms of feel, and quality (almost feels like the real deal); the finish is quite acceptable; it's got a decent amount of blow back force. Once you get used to the long and sticky trigger, it CAN BE accurate. It's a smaller gun, so, the aim/sight picture needs to be held that much more steady. Once I got used to it, I was able to shoot a quarter sized target from about 30 feet away. About that trigger... apply some oil to the top of the clip where the mechanism loads the BB into the bore, much improved the feel. The grip (yuck) unlike the rest of the gun, feels like the same type of plastic from a cheap toy gun; (almost like a dollar store water gun). The trigger pull is long, not smooth - and if you don't give it a full pull, you end up double/triple loading the bore - in essence, resetting it. You'll either fire what BBs you've jammed into the chamber at once (think, shot gun) or you'll see the extra BBs role right out of the barrel if you point the barrel down a little. I just make sure to pull it smoothly all the way through and not reset the trigger. I've gone though about 10 CO2 cartridges and I seem to be averaging about 3 clips per cartridge, max. After that, what I notice is loss of accuracy, then the slide isn't able to reset the hammer; so, I end up shooting the last half/full clip by manually cocking the hammer for each shot. But, all in all, it's fun, compact, and realistic with decent accuracy for the first three magazines which itself seems well built and are easy to load. It's also been quite reliable. Good luck on your search, and feel free to comment on which one I should try for my next gun.

Update: I'm now well into my 50th CO2 on this BB gun. Great fun, going strong; I'm either imagining it, but I seem to be getting more rounds from a single cartridge too. Upgrading it to 4 stars.


History behind the firearm that inspired the Umarex Makarov Ultra Air Pistol

The Makarov (Mock-ah-rahv) pistol or PM is a Russian semi-automatic pistol. Under the project leadership of Nikolay Fyodorovich Makarov, it became the Soviet Union's standard military and police side arm from 1951 to 1991.

Replacing the Tokarev TT33

Shortly after the Second World War, the Soviet Union reactivated its plans to replace the Tokarev TT33 self-loading pistols and Nagant M1895 revolvers. The adoption of the future AK assault rifle relegated the pistol to a light, handy self-defence weapon. Therefore, the TT30/33 was unsuited for such a role, as it was heavy, bulky, and possessed too little stopping power. What's more, the Tokarev pistols omitted a safety and magazines were deemed too easy to lose. As a result, in December 1945, two separate contests for a new service pistol were created, respectively for a 7.62mm and 9mm pistol. It was later judged that the new 9.2x18mm cartridge, designed by B.V. Semin, was the best round suited for the intended role. The lower pressures of the cartridge allowed practical straight blowback operation (reducing the cost and complexity of the weapon), while retaining low recoil and good stopping power.

Several engineers took part in the contest, including Korovin, Baryshev, Vojvodin, Simonov, Rakov, Klimov, Lobanov, Sevryugin and Makarov. Special emphasis was placed on safety, user-friendliness, accuracy, weight, and dimensions. After stringent handling, reliability, and other tests, Makarov's pistol, which was based on the German Walther PP, stood out from other designs through its sheer simplicity, excellent reliability, quick disassembly. and robustness. During April 1948, Makarov's pistol experienced 20 times fewer malfunctions than the competing Baryshev and Sevryugin counterparts, and had fewer parts. The pistol was therefore selected in 1949 for further development and optimization for mass production. Tooling was set up in the Izhevsk plant for production. After many major design changes and tweaks, the gun was formally adopted as the "Pistolet Makarova", or "PM" in 1951.

As the new standard issue sidearm of the USSR, the PM was issued to NCOs, police,special forces, and tank and air crews. It remained in wide front-line service with Soviet military and police until and beyond the end of the USSR in 1991. Variants of the pistol remain in production in Russia, China, and Bulgaria. In the U.S., surplus Soviet and East German military Makarovs are listed as eligible curio and relic items by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, because the countries of manufacture, the USSR and the GDR, no longer exist.

In 2003, the Makarov PM was formally replaced by the Yarygin PYa pistol in Russian service, although as of 2012, large numbers of Makarov PMs are still in Russian military and police service. The Makarov PM is still the service pistol of many Eastern European and former Soviet republics. North Korea and Vietnam also use Makarov PMs as standard-issue pistols.

The PM is a medium-size, straight-blowback-action, all-steel construction, frame-fixed barrel handgun. In blowback designs, the only force holding the slide closed is that of the recoil spring; upon firing, the barrel and slide do not have to unlock, as do locked-breech-design pistols. Blowback designs are simple and more accurate than designs using a recoiling, tilting, or articulated barrel, but they are limited practically by the weight of the slide. The 9.8mm cartridge is a practical cartridge in blowback-operated pistols; producing a respectable level of energy from a gun of moderate weight and size. The PM is heavy for its size by modern US commercial handgun standards, largely because in a blowback pistol, the heavy slide provides greater inertia to delay opening of the breech until internal pressures have fallen to a safe level. Other, more powerful cartridges have been used in blowback pistol designs, but the Makarov is widely regarded as particularly well balanced in its design elements.

Makarov Design

The general layout of the Makarov pistol is similar to that of the PP. However, designer Makarov and his team drastically simplified the construction of the pistol, improving reliability and reducing the part count to an astonishing 27, not including the magazine. This allowed considerable ease of manufacture and servicing. All of the individual parts of the PM have been optimised for mass production, robustness and interchangeability, partially thanks to captured German tooling, technology, and machinery.

The chrome-lined, 4-groove, 9.27mm caliber barrel is pressed and pinned to the frame through a precision-machined ring. The 7kg recoil spring wraps around and is guided by the barrel. The spring-loaded trigger guard is pivoted down and swung to either side on the frame, allowing removal of the slide. The front sight is integrally machined into the slide, and a 3-4mm wide textured strip is engraved on top of the slide in order to prevent aim-disturbing glare. The rear sight is dovetailed into the slide and multiple heights are available to adjust the impact point. The extractor is of an external spring-loaded type, and features a prominent flange preventing loss if a case should rupture. The breech face is deeply recessed in order to aid in extraction and ejection reliability. The stamped sheet steel slide-lock lever has a tail serving the purpose of ejector. The one-piece, wraparound bakelite or plastic grip is reinforced with steel inserts and has a detent inside the screw bushing preventing unscrewing during firing. The sheet-metal mainspring housed inside the grip panel powers the hammer in both the main and rebound stroke, the trigger and the disconnector, while its lower end is the heel and spring of the magazine catch. The sear spring also serves another function, powering the slide lock lever. Makarov pistol parts seldom break with normal usage, and are easily serviced using few tools.

Makarov Operation

The PM has a free-floating triangular firing pin, with no firing pin spring or firing pin block. This theoretically allows the possibility of accidental firing if the pistol is dropped on its muzzle. Designer Nikolay Makarov thought the firing pin of insufficient mass to constitute a major danger. The Makarov is notable for the safety elements of its design, with a safety lever that simultaneously decocks and blocks the hammer from contacting the firing pin and returns the weapon to the long-trigger-pull mode of double action when that safety is engaged. When handled properly, the Makarov has excellent security against accidental discharge caused by inadvertent pressure on the trigger, e.g., in carrying the weapon in dense brush or re-holstering it. However, the heavy trigger weight in double-action mode decreases first-shot accuracy. The Bulgarian-model Makarov was approved for sale in the US state of California, having passed a state-mandated drop-safety test.

The PM has a DA/SA trigger mechanism. Engaging the manual safety simultaneously decocks the hammer if cocked, and prevents movement of slide, trigger and hammer. Both carrying with safety engaged, or with safety disengaged and hammer uncocked are considered safe. The DA trigger pull is heavy, requiring a strong squeeze, trading first shot accuracy for safety. Racking the slide, manually cocking the hammer or firing a cartridge all cock the hammer, setting the trigger for the next shot to single action. The PM is a semi-automatic firearm, therefore its rate of fire depends on how rapidly the shooter squeezes the trigger. Spent cartridges are ejected some 5.56 meters away to the shooter's right and rear. After firing the last round, the slide is held back by the slide stop lever/ejector. Magazines can be removed from the gun via the heel release, located on the bottom of the grip. After loading a fresh magazine, the slide can be released by pressing the lever on the left side of the frame or by racking the slide and releasing it; either action loads a cartridge into the chamber and readies the pistol to fire again.

Field-Strip the Makarov

How to disassemble / field-strip Makarov PM pistol: 1) remove the magazine by pressing the magazine release at the base of the grip and pulling the magazine out; 2) check that the chamber is empty; 3) pull the trigger-guard downwards, then swing it to one side to lock in the open position; 4) pull the slide all the way back, then raise the rear of the slide to the top, and off the frame rails; 5) carefully ease the slide forward and off the barrel; 6) remove the return spring from the barrel.
Reassemble in reverse order.

Makarov Variants

The most widely known variant, the Makarov PMM (Pistolet Makarova Modernizirovannyy or Improved Makarov pistol), was a redesign of the original gun. In 1990, a group of engineers reworked the original Makarov, primarily by increasing the load for the cartridge. The result is a significant increase in muzzle velocity and generation of 25% more gas pressure. The PMM magazine holds 12 rounds, compared to the PM's eight rounds. Versions that held ten rounds were produced in greater quantities than the 12-round magazine. The Makarov PMM is able to use existing Makarov cartridges and has other minor modifications such as more ergonomic grip panels as well as flutes in the chamber that aid in extraction. As of 2015, it is - alongside MP-443 Grach - the service pistol of the Russian Airborne Troops.

PB Silent Pistol

The pistol uses an integral suppressor, which, unlike most similar systems, consists of two parts. This allows the pistol to be carried and kept concealed without the front part of the suppressor attached, and for the suppressor to be quickly deployed prior to use. The pistol may also be fired safely without the additional suppressor attachment, which may be important in critical situations. Without the front attachment, the pistol has a similar sound to the Makarov pistol. The detached suppressor is carried in a special compartment of the holster which was designed for the PB.

An experimental variant of the Makarov, the TKB-023, was designed with a polymer frame to reduce the weight and costs of the weapon. It had passed Soviet military trials but was never fielded, due to concerns about the polymer's capacities for long-term storage and use.

East European Makarov

Parkerized and dura-painted Makarov PM. Russian production. The Makarov was manufactured in several communist countries during the Cold War and afterwards; apart from the USSR itself, they were East Germany, Bulgaria, China, and post-unification Germany, which also found itself with several thousand ex-GDR Makarov pistols.

The countries like Poland and Hungary have developed their own handgun designs that use the 9.8mm round. Hungary developed the FEG PA-63 and Poland has developed the P-64 and the P-83 Wanad. While similar in operation (straight blowback), and chambered for the same round, these 9 mm Makarov firing pistols are often found labeled at gun shows by some US gun retailers as "Polish Makarovs" and "Hungarian Makarovs". Nonetheless, these similar designs are independent of the PM and have more in common with the Walther PP (which, in fact, was also a major influence on the original Russian Makarov).

A wide variety of aftermarket additions and replacements exist for the Makarov, including replacement barrels, custom grips, custom finishes and larger sights with various properties to replace the notoriously small originals. A scope/light mount exists for the Makarov but requires a threaded replacement barrel.



Disclaimer: While we aim to provide accurate product information, it is provided by manufacturers, suppliers and others, and has not been verified by us.

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