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Zermatt Arms Waltz 9 blends 2011-inspired ergonomics with a striker-fired system, ultra-short trigger travel, and a patent-pending roller lock in a semi-custom pistol. The Waltz 9 marks Zermatt’s move into handguns after years focused on precision rifle actions.

It leans heavily on tight tolerances, modular options, and a trigger system that immediately stands out. The company plans to open orders in the second quarter, with shipping expected in the third.
A Hybrid Design With Familiar Roots
The Waltz 9 takes visual and ergonomic cues from the 2011 platform but runs as a striker-fired pistol. Zermatt built it around a short-recoil, tilting barrel system paired with a patent-pending roller locking block.
That setup allows a very tight slide-to-frame fit at lockup, then frees things up during cycling. The goal is smooth function without sacrificing precision or reliability.

The pistol uses Glock-pattern magazines, including G17-length and longer options. Controls cater to left and right-handed shooters. Buyers can choose standard or oversized magazine releases on either side, along with ambidextrous slide controls.

Trigger and Shooting Characteristics
The trigger is the headline feature. Zermatt lists a straight-pull trigger at roughly 36 ounces. Trigger travel measures about 0.050 inches, with an extremely short reset around 0.020 inches.
Ride the reset and the wall is right there again. It’s the best feeling pistol trigger I have ever laid my fingers on, with minimal movement and extremely crisp break.

Zermatt ships the Waltz 9 with three recoil springs. They weigh in at 12.5, 14, and 16 pounds. These are compatible with Beretta 92 patterns. Users can tune the gun without hunting proprietary springs.
Configuration and Optics Support
The Waltz 9 comes optic-ready with a proprietary 7075 aluminum plate system. Plates support RMR/SRO, DeltaPoint Pro, and ACRO footprints. Buyers can select forward or rearward backup iron sights, mounted either in front of or behind the optic.

Barrel options include a USPSA Limited Optics legal version or a compensated variant. Frames and slides use 416R stainless steel, while the grip module is 6061 aluminum with interchangeable texture options. Two magwell sizes are available: standard and oversized competition.

Availability and Pricing
Zermatt Arms plans to sell the Waltz 9 direct-to-consumer at launch, with possible dealer availability later.
Orders should open in Q2, with deliveries expected in Q3. Pricing starts around $4,900, with PVD finishes costing extra. Every configuration is selectable online, from optics plates to textures and colors.
Learn more HERE.
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Prices start at $4900 ? WOW ! What a bargain !! I can’t believe this gun is so inexpensive. The starting price shouod be, say, $7500. Then we can add some extra features and VOILA !!! A handgun that will cost me $10,000 and my wife wont even notice all that money gone !!! WOW! The assholes at Zermatt Arms must have quite the boat payments. What they are offering is nice, but who are they trying to fool ? Its a bit arrogant to shove your gun design into the market place and price it sky high because you somehow make a gun that is 1000x better than a $550 Glock. People seem to forget that if you use a gun in self defense, the police in almost 100% of the time will confiscate said gun. And you may not get it back, as happened to a friend of mine who used his beautiful Colt Commander Nickel Plated to shoot an armed robber in front of his house as he was getting something out of his van. $4900 bucks. Wow. Any gun that costs that much better have a gorgeous finish on it. This Zermatt thing looks like it was painted with Rust-O-Leum Matt Deck Chair paint. No thanks, Zermatt. Enjoy your new boat.
Regards the .218 Bee, cases can be made from 32-20 and 25-20 although the 32-20 might need to be neck reamed. I have done so with 25-20 with no problems. Sold my Winchester model 43 but still have a TC 10″ bbl. loaded incidentally on a Lyman tong tool because that’s what I started on in about 1963