Kel-Tec Weapons
I'll rate most Kel Tec weapons at ST reliability. People's mileage may vary, but generally if well maintained they work just fine, but they could be be better. It could be argued that the ST-rated guns are 60% likely to be UR out of the box and require about 50eb and an hour of a Weaponsmithing time (Diff 10) to 'fluff and buff' them back to ST reliability. Further reliability increases work per the normal weapon mod rules, however.
Prices are based off of MSRP /2 to convert to eb, then tweaked by a little just to make them different. A lot of kels have the same pricepoint but games are about balance. Old guns always seem to be fairly cheap in CP
Availability i'm putting mostly at Poor. Even when they're being produced it can be hard to get your hands on a kel-tec because of their popularity, but of course with these being old guns in 2020 they're gonna be harder to find.
Light Pistols
P-32 & P3-AT
P-32: P -- -1 -- P -- P -- 1d6+1 (.32C) -- 7 -- 2 -- ST -- 50m -- 140eb
P-3AT: P -- -1 -- P -- P -- 2d6 (.380C) -- 6 -- 2 -- ST -- 50m -- 150eb
The P-32 and P-3AT are both incredibly small so-called 'mouseguns' so small they can be concealed almost anywhere, but with a reasonably lethal punch. The P-3AT was later copied by Ruger as the LCP, but early runs of the LCP were less reliable and prone to going off when dropped, not something that the P-3AT suffers from. Specialized lasers were made by several companies that preserve the gun's pocket profile while enhancing accuracy. Just use standard rules (100eb, +1WA). The newer model P-32s look almost exactly like the P-3AT.
PMR-30
PMR-30: P -- +1 -- J -- P -- 1d6+1 (.22 Mag C) -- 30 -- 2 -- ST -- 75m -- 200eb
Sometimes called the Poor-Man's Five-seveN, it took the same concept as the Five-seveN (jam as many small, high-velocity rounds as possible into a small pistol), but used the weaker and cheaper .22 magnum round as opposed to FN's exclusive 5.7mm round. The result is a fun novelty but not a major threat. Comes with fiber-optic sights, a bracket for mounting a scope or red-dot, and an underbarrel rail for laser or flashlight
Medium Pistols
PF-9
PF-9: P -- -1 -- P -- P -- 2d6+1 (9mmC) -- 7 -- 2 -- ST -- 50m -- 160eb
The smallest, lightest, most compact 9mm handgun ever made...until Ruger copied Kel again with the LC-9, which is essentially the same gun, but with a higher price tag. The PF-9 has an integral rail under the barrel for mounting lasers or flashlights if you desire.
P-11 Family
P-11: P -- -1 -- P -- P -- 2d6+1 (9mmC) -- 12 -- 2 -- ST -- 50m -- 170eb
The P-11 holds the distinction of being the smallest double-stacked 9mm handgun ever made, only slightly larger than the PF-9, but it lacks the integral rail, making lasers harder but not impossible to mount.
P-357/P-40: P -- -1 -- P -- R -- 2d6+3 (357 sigC/.40 C) -- 10 -- 2 -- UR -- 50m -- 200eb
The P-357 and P-40 are both drop-in conversion kits for the P-11, replacing the barrel/block and slide and using a different mgazine. They were available only for a limited time and were probably not as reliable as the standard P-11 and are hard to find even now
Very Heavy Pistols
PLR-16 Family
PLR-22: P -- +2 -- J* or L -- P -- 1d6 (.22C) -- 10 or 30 -- 2 -- VR -- 100m -- 200eb
PLR-16: P -- +1 -- J* or L -- R -- 5d6 (5.56 NATO C) -- 10 or 30 -- 2 -- VR -- 100m -- 400eb -- BOD MIN: 10
The P-22 and P-16 are pistols made from cut down AR-15 actions. They kinda stretch the J-rating with a short mag in, you should probably have a Bod 8 to really pull it off. Anyone else, or with a 30 round mag in it's L. Because these are made from AR-15 actions, they're relatively easy for a gunsmith with the right parts to convert to autofire weapons (-25% to the cost and time of autofire mods). Those that aren;t rigged for auto are soemtimes given an Electrothermal enhancement, making them a popular jacket gun for full borgs (Bod 14 for the ETE version)