Thursday, January 13, 2022

Fallen Star #1: Ultra Star, 1994

It was almost thirty years ago, 1994, when the last new production model from Star Bonifacio Echevarria, S.A. was imported into this country by Interarms. Within five years, both Star and Interarms would be no more.


For decades Star's service-type autos largely riffed off of Colt's Browning designs. In the 1970s they came up with an in-house, clean sheet of paper design that was eventually produced as the Model 28. (It has a lot in common with the CZ-75, but was designed at the same time, half a continent away. Both design teams were cribbing the same ideas, though.)

The Model 28 featured a double-action trigger, hammer-dropping safeties, a fixed lug with an enclosed cam path for unlocking rather than a swinging link, inside frame rails, and a captive recoil spring. The new pistol formed the basis for subsequent Star designs, of which the Ultra Star was the final evolution; the Ultimate Star, if you will.


The Ultra Star ported the basic formula of the duty-size Model 28/30/31 pistols over into a compact, single-stack form factor with a capacity of 9+1 rounds of 9mm. The big changes were the replacement of the Colt/Browning-type locking lugs on the barrel with a SIG Sauer-style shoulder over the chamber that locked into the ejection port and, obviously, the polymer frame. This would be the first polymer pistol from Star...and the last.

The manufacturer closed its doors for good in 1997.

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3 comments:

  1. A friend of mine had the Ultra Star in .40 S&W. I searched many dusty corners of the Internet, trying to find him a spare magazine. No luck.

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  2. Blackwing110:17 AM

    Is that thumb safety as hard to manipulate as it looks?

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  3. Anonymous8:15 PM

    @Blackwing1, I have size Large hands. Reaching the thumb safety when it's in the upmost (safe) position, and pulling it down into fire position, requires me to shift my grip. to get the pad of my thumb on top of the safety. However, de-cocking the pistol doesn't require any shift in my grip. I have just enough reach to be able to push the safety all the way up, using the tip of my thumb. The beauty of this model is that you can confidently carry it loaded, racked, and de-cocked, with thumb safety off and hammer down. The firing pin block that is connected to the trigger pull is very robust. I've tested it by hitting on the firing pin with the trigger forward and that pin doesn't move.

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