Mauser Pistol C96 Broomhandle Covering numbers 1 900500. Please enter a serial number and click the submit button. Click here to view the newest antique gun ammunition arrivals from Down East Antiques. Email infojoesalter. com or call 6037324000 for more information Walther P38 Pistol By LTC Joel Johnston Ret, US Army Ordnance Corps P38 BYF 44 Mauser 1944. Matching numbers, Original finish, Nonimport. Browse all new and used Mauser Pistols Broomhandle for sale and buy with confidence from Guns International. Mauser Selbstlader Forgotten Weapons. The history of the Mauser semi automatic rifles begins under questionable circumstances. The line of rifles began in 1. Paul Mausers development of the Mauser 1. Recoil Operated Rifle. This original rifle operated by the means of short recoil, where the breech block is cycled by means of a partially traversing barrel. The history of the Mauser semiautomatic rifles begins under questionable circumstances. The line of rifles began in 1897 with Paul Mausers development of the. Hoosier Gun Works, Gunparts,odd lots, part guns, magazines, stocks. Mostly CR Military, Mauser, Enfields. M1903, M1903A1, M1903 serial numbers, owners manual, m1903 for sale, for sale,bolt action, Springfield m1903, values, A2, A3, A4, m1903 prices, rifle m 1903. Questions And Answers Page. If you have a question about firearms and you want it posted on this page click here. Return to Collectors Headquarters. Interestingly, this original rifle had a provision that was to allow for slow fire manual firing whereby on the rearward movement of the breech block, it would snag a latch that would need to be depressed for the bolt to be allowed to travel back toward the barrel and strip a new round from the magazine. This provision was considered as a way to prevent the waste of ammunition, and the self loading feature was only to be used in an emergency that required a high rate of fire. Unfortunately for Paul Mauser, the rifle provided an emergency of its own and, during testing of the rifle, a malfunction cost Paul Mauser one of his eyes. Despite personal injury, development of Mausers self loading rifles continued. In 1. 90. 5, a new rifle appeared utilizing an entirely different method of operation. Unlike the short recoil action of the Model 1. Model 1. 90. 5 Self loading Rifle Sometimes referred to as the Model 1. NOTE All single items are listed by their SERIAL NUMBER. If serial is not noted in the description, it indicates that we have several examples of this model that. The most identifiable feature of this rifle is the pivoting bolt handle that appears much like that of a bolt action rifle, except located near the very front end of the bolt. The bolt catch feature of the Model 1. Mauser did give the rifle the provision for manual operation. If the pivoting bolt handle was turned down locked, as in the case of a bolt action rifle, the rifle would be prevented from operating semi automatically. The magazine was internal and held 5 rounds. Abandoning both the short and long recoil designs, the next iteration of the Mauser Self loading Rifle came in 1. Mausers C0. 60. The first apparent difference between the Mauser 0. Self loading Rifle and the previous two Mauser self loaders is the relatively massive magazine size. Opting not for an internal magazine, the 0. In fact due to the nature of the weapons operation, an internal magazine would have been extremely difficult, if not practically impossible to load. The method of operation for the 0. When the rifle is in battery, two pivoting lugs in a V shape join together behind the breech block to prevent the block from recoiling rearwards, locking it in place. When the rifle is fired, recoil instead operates a slide that is positioned atop the receiver that is attached to the two locking lugs via cams cut into it. As the slide moves rearward, it opens the two lugs so they sit flush against the walls of the receiver, which finally allows the impulse of recoil to drive the bolt rearward. With the slide locked back in place, the bolt is free to travel forward again, stripping a round from the magazine into the chamber. Thereafter the slide is released, which again locks the lugs behind the breech block and enables the firing pin to be engaged. It was an unnecessarily complicated design, and reloading the weapon was a laborious two handed affair. Just to load the weapon fresh, the slide must be pulled back and manually locked into place, so that the locking lugs are retracted. With a hold open device keeping the slide rearward, the bolt can then be pulled rearward and let go to strip a new round into the magazine. Then, the slide catch must be released, so that the weapon is fully in battery. Despite the overwhelming complication of the design, the 0. Mauser self loaders. The same design principle was carried over into the final and most notable model of the Mauser self loader The Selbstlader Karabiner Mauser M 1. The Selbstlader Karabiner Mauser M 1. The 0. 60. 8 rifle had been tested as an aviation rifle, but its length was unwieldy. A rifle soon appeared with the same mechanism and a shorter half length stock with a protrusion near the magazine well to aid in shouldering the rifle this was designated as the Mauser 1. Self loading Rifle. Undergoing military tests at the start of the First World War, the Mauser 1. German Army proper, but found a home in the German Air Corps and the German Ballon und Zeppelin Truppe. The German Air Corps adopted the rifle officially as the Fliegerkarabine 1. Ballon und Zeppelin Truppe adopted the rifle officially as the Selbstlader Karabiner Mauser M 1. Issued with multiple 2. Due to the expensive manufacturing costs and intricate high tolerance machining, only 1. Selbstlader Karabiner Mauser M 1. While the high tolerance machining led to impressive mechanical accuracy, it suffered from easy fouling. For the rifle to operate reliably, rounds had to be properly lubricated in grease, making them a dirt trap which kept the rifle in the air. Ground usage was out of the question. On top of the reliability concerns, there was the issue of the weapons punishing recoil. The fixed barrel design led to the recoil impulse being much sharper as compared to other gas or recoil based mechanisms where the barrel or an operation rod would absorb some of the recoil. That was not so with the M 1. When the German military acquired sufficient numbers of the much cheaper Flieger Selbstlader Karabiner 1. Mondragon Rifle, the Mauser Fliegerkarabine 1. German Air Corps. The Flieger Selbstlader Karabiner 1. Mondragon was inherently less accurate and more prone to stoppages according to its Bavarian Field Manual. It states that compared to the previous introduced weapon, being the Mauser Fliegerkarabine 1. The unified construction of this self loading weapon results in greater variations in the targeting position than exist in previously introduced weapons. Only deviations of more than 2. For every one Mauser Fliegerkarabine 1. Flieger Selbstlader Karabiner 1. Mondragon rifles took its place due to the frequency of stoppages. So even if the final Mauser self loader was by no means a spectacular rifle and suffered from serious reliability issues, there were still objectively worse alternatives. Manuals. Mauser Selbstlader manual in GermanPhotos. Download this gallery in high resolution. Mauser M1. 91. 5 photos For more of the developmental history of the Mauser M1. Mauser Selbstlader article The magazine change is a complicated process. First the magazine release, located in the front of the trigger guard is depressed and the trigger guard is pulled down. The magazine is then pulled free of the weapon. Two tabs on the sides of the receiver, visible above the trigger guard, are pushed forward. The bolt is drawn to the rear, where it is held open. A new magazine is inserted, and the trigger guard is pushed upwards, which locks the magazine in place and releases the bolt. Closer view of a magazine change operation Close up of the trigger guard showing the trigger and magazine release. Top view of the receiver deck and bolt, showing the wing shaped cocking handle and stripper clip guide. Top of the receiver deck removed from the rifle. Underside of the receiver deck cover showing the complicated nature of this design. The steel plate with two grooves acts on a stud on two flaps that lock the bolt in place. The recoil pushes this plate back, which unlocks the flaps, delaying the bolt stroke until pressures are safe. Underside of the receiver deck with locking flaps, showing where the small studs on top of the flaps fit into the deck. Both sides of the locking flaps.
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