
22 short, produced to equip the German team for the Berlin Olympic Games of 1936 for the rapid fire events. 22 Long Rifle but the Schnellfeuer version used the. The Norinco TT Olympia is a Chinese copy of the Walther M1936 Hunter made sometime after 1980. In 1957 Smith & Wesson introduced the Model 41, based on the Olympia-Pistole. In 1952 the pistol was reintroduced under license by Hämmerli-Walther. The pistol continued to be manufactured up until 1944, but no major changes were made during the war. The final development Walther made was the M1936 Olympia II that won five Gold Medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympics and effectively ended the Olympic reign of the Colt Woodsman Target model. It was followed by the M1932, the Olympia Pistole I, and used to good effect in the 1932 Olympic Games.

The first version was the M1925, formally known as the Automatic Walther Sport Pistol cal.

The Walther Model 1936 Olympia II is a single action semi-automatic handgun manufactured by Walther. Sport (Standard), Funfkampf (Pentathlon), Jaeger (Hunter) & Schnellfeuer (Rapid-fire) Semi-automatic pistol Walther M1936 Olympia II
