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The barrel is bored out to fit the liner. Looks like a good desk ornament. You can spend a lot of money on it and still not have much. To me more value the way it is. Just one collectors opinion. Bill
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Don't automatically assume that it needs to be re-sleeved. Try it first and you may find that it shoots just fine. Visual inspection of the lands and grooves it usually sort of a waste of time in predicting group size. And besides, if it goes bang that's what counts.
dju |
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OK. Good luck.
dju |
Well, the serial number and suffix would be on the front of the frame, if rusted away; then the answer I gave you is about as close as you are going to get...
You didn't answer where it came from? As it has a later WW2 era magazine, I wondered where it was found? ed |
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You said in your earlier post: "Well, hard to say, if no date on the receiver then it is likely post 1921 but before 1930". I thought it couldn't be after 1914 because it doesn't have the stock lug attachment which I understood was added during 1914. Also I don't think it's possible for a deeply stamped series of numbers to have completely disappeared from the barrel AND the frame. The barrel maybe as it is quite corroded but the front of the frame isn't that bad and absolutely no ghost of an impression there. The story I just got about this luger is not complete but it was given to my friend by someone who said it was found in a river in Germany without the trigger assembly. What year it was found I don't know yet but from the condition I imagine it was long after the end of WW2. I say WW2 because of the magazine which was in the gun when found. It's hard to nail down these stories as you know and they do tend to change a bit in the re-telling over the years. It has been suggested that German officers about to be captured would remove the trigger assembly and throw pistol and trigger in opposite directions to avoid having a working gun fall into enemy hands but who knows? |
I've had a chance to do some reading of posts in the various forums here and most appear to indicate that even early lugers had the serial number stamped on the front of frame and barrel as well as other places.
My burning question is why doesn't this one? Any ideas? Also Is the number "1" and number "57" stamped underside of slide significant? (See earlier pics previous page) |
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The DWM toggle and no date places it about 1908-09, made at Deutches Waffen and Munitionsfabrik, if it's miliotary - possibly later if it's a Commercial Luger. After 1909, military receivers were dated. The numbers on the underside of the receiver lug are an indicator of the pistol's last two serial number digits. The absence of numbers on the frame puzzle me. The barrel is too corroded to have any numbers left. So, probably a Commercial 1908 or a 1st Model Military. Bob |
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[QUOTE=whcoyote;183964]That's where the end of the trigger pin goes, if it had a trigger.
I'm aware of that. The following threads clarified that I was wondering if the hole had been enlarged by drilling or corrosion. |
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I have never seen a Luger without a S/N on the nose of the frame. That's not to say that it never happened - just that I'm not aware of it. I collect only Imperial Military Lugers (1904-1918) so there may be some in other genres (?) that are not marked on the nose. I think this Luger was marked in the Commercial fashion: S/N on nose of frame and under barrel; last two digits of S/N under the takedown lever, under the lip of the side plate, on the left side of trigger, on rear of rear toggle link, sometimes on top edge of safety lever tab, bottom of receiver lug, underside of forward part of front toggle link (just behind the breech block). I have also seen Lugers that were commercially marked with the S/N on the safety bar and the sear bar although this is not a prescribed location. Check all these parts and see if there are any remnants of the S/N anywhere. Bob |
alanint: Go back and read the last paragraph of your Post #7, above.
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Is it possible that their Lugers were marked similarly??? And a faint # corroded away??? |
Don't even remember making that silly comment...thanks.
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Yes Mike,I see "_7" on the bottom of the receiver lug - can't make out the first digit. So, that may be a clue as to the S/N of the piece. Still can't explain the blank frame nose. Maybe someone else can help with that, although I think everyone with good knowledge has said their piece - except for George and one or two others.
Bob |
The ONLY Lugers I have personally ever seen that didn't have a serial number on the front of the frame were guns that had obviously had their number removed (Defaced). Often, the evidence of this is that when the gun is properly assembled, the upper receiver protrudes forward of the lower frame but what amounts to about the same depth (or deeper) than the depth of the numbers that were removed.
Possession of a gun with a defaced serial number might be considered to be a problem by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives... (BATFE)... Better check their website and search for "defaced" |
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If it was recovered in Europe sometime shortly after the war, it is possible that the gun was stolen or captured from a German, then had it's serial number removed in order to hide it's identity. A number of defaced/unnumbered pistols have surfaced in Belgium the last couple of years.
If it was a stolen or captured gun, the fact that the side plate and trigger were missing may be explained by someone removing these in order to keep the gun safe against abuse (at home, for example). Since there were quite heavy punishments on the possession of fire arms after the war in most countries, it is not unlikely that someone got cold feet and eventually decided to ditch the gun. |
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