I Have This Old Gun: Seecamp LWS Pocket Pistols

by
posted on April 7, 2021
While the trend of small-caliber pocket pistols was not new by the later half of the 20th century, some of those models available from different manufacturers left some things to be desired in terms of overall quality. In the 1970s, Ludwig Wilhelm Seecamp decided to make his own take on a quality pocket pistol. Seecamp was trained by a master gunsmith in Germany before emigrating to the United States after World War II, where he worked for Mossberg before venturing off on his own.

A spec-sheet for the Seecamp LWS-32.
A spec-sheet for the Seecamp LWS-32.

Seecamp started his own company, L.W. Seecamp Co., in 1973 as a pistolsmith and modification shop initially. The Seecamp company eventually began to produce its own small handguns, starting in 1981 with the released its first small pocket-size semi-automatic handgun chambered in .25 ACP, the LWS-25. The LWS-25 was later discontinued and replaced in 1985 by a second model chambered in .32 ACP, the LWS-32. 

A Seecamp LWS-32 with six-round single-stack magazine removed.
A Seecamp LWS-32 with six-round single-stack magazine removed.

Unlike most other small pocket-size handguns commonly available at the time, the LWS pistols were made to a higher standard of fit and finish. The Seecamp company only had a handful of employees at its peak, and all the pistols were assembled and finished by hand. The LWS handguns were remarkably small for a semi-automatic design of the time at 4.25" long, 3.25" high, under 1" wide and with a weight of 12.5 oz. loaded with a six-round magazine for the LWS-32 model.

A photo layout of a Seecamp LWS disassembled.
A photo layout of a Seecamp LWS disassembled.

The LWS pistols are also unique in terms of design operation and features. The pistols use a chamber-ring delayed-block action, in which an angular ring cut into the chamber causes a delay in the rearward motion of the slide until chamber pressures drop to a safe level.  The action also uses dual-nested recoil springs, a design feature that has become common in more recent compact handgun designs. Seecamp pistols also feature a double-action-only trigger with a hammer contoured with the back of the slide.

Shooting a Seecamp LWS pocket pistol.
Shooting a Seecamp LWS pocket pistol.

In many ways, the Seecamp LWS pistols paved the way for future generations of sub-compact handgun designs found in the market today. At the time of original production in the 1980s and 1990s, the LWS handguns were so popular and sought after by some circles that the prices in the secondary market were regularly higher than retail. During the height of demand, LWS handgun prices reached up to $2,000 per pistol and were selling out years in advance due to the slower output of the small Seecamp company.

After L.W. Seecamp passed away in 1989, his son took over the company and continued production of the LWS-32 out of a small shop in Milford, Conn. Production of the LWS handguns was taken over by Whaley Precision in 2014 and continues to the present day.

To watch complete segments of past episodes of American Rifleman TV, go to
americanrifleman.org/artv. For all-new episodes of ARTV, tune in Wednesday nights to Outdoor Channel 8:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. EST.

Latest

Springfield Armory Hellcat Pro Rifleman Review 1
Springfield Armory Hellcat Pro Rifleman Review 1

Rifleman Review: Springfield Armory Hellcat Pro

Springfield Armory's Hellcat Pro is taller, longer and heavier than the company's original Hellcat, but these dimensional increases actually do a lot to benefit the armed citizen.

Bill Ruger’s Prototype Rifle

Ruger may be celebrating its 75th anniversary in 2024, but the first firearm designed and built by William Batterman Ruger, the semi-automatic Savage Model 99 conversion seen to the left, came some 10 years before the Standard Model debuted in 1949.

Windham Weaponry Back In Business

On April 19, Windham Weaponry announced it is back in business, although a company spokesman confirmed the effort to re-open began Jan. 1.

Rifleman Report: “Piles Of Guns”

While sport shooting and hunting are still undertaken in many countries around the world, our staffers don’t often have the opportunity to test new guns in places as far away and mystical as Australia, but that’s exactly where Executive Editor Evan Brune went with the new rifle that is the subject of this month’s cover story.

Preview: Sticky Holsters Optics Ready

Sticky Holsters now offers versions of its holsters with a trimmed down front edge that accommodates a slide-mounted micro red-dot.

Affordable Powerhouse: EAA 10 mm Witness2311

Harnessing the power of the 10 mm Auto in a compact format with generous capacity, EAA’s Witness2311 is an affordable and shootable way to ride the current 10 mm wave.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.