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-   -   Younger collector in need of some help. (https://forum.lugerforum.com/showthread.php?t=30802)

Curly1 07-16-2013 01:20 AM

Nice one, welcome to the forum.

Cheesy411 07-16-2013 02:38 PM

Pics of the back strap! With the N. I paid 1600 for it in the end not including tax. I can't take delivery until 11th of August do to some background check on the pistol it's self. That's a first for me you can walk in and out with a firearm as long as you have a valid CCW. Oh well it's paid for and locked in a safe with my name on it. :cheers:

alanint 07-16-2013 04:27 PM

Great score and a great investment!!

You should find plenty of threads about similar pistols in the Naval Luger section here.

Patronen 07-16-2013 04:32 PM

That number N4425 is listed in Third Reich Lugers by Jan C. Still as 952c, but your number looks like 592c?
Congratulations on your find!

Cheesy411 07-16-2013 04:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Patronen (Post 236808)
That number N4425 is listed in Third Reich Lugers by Jan C. Still as 952c, but your number looks like 592c?
Congratulations on your find!

That is correct it reads 592. I wish the magazine matched, but at least I have a magazine for it.

alanint 07-16-2013 04:41 PM

Curious that a documented Luger should end up for sale at a local gun shop. These usually change hands privately.

John Sabato 07-16-2013 04:51 PM

Probably a typo mistake in the book.

Cheesy411 07-16-2013 06:06 PM

Well the store I bought this from is a pawn shop/gun store I shop there a lot because they usually have nice antique weapons, but more importantly I enjoy shooting the breeze with my friend with the same interests who works there. The story goes a guy brought it in to sell they bought it, the next day I come in and ask my usual questions about having any enfields or 1903 bolt actions and of course Lugers. Happened to be my lucky day because they had this waiting for me. I've had a good run of luck as of late. Last month I picked up a 1944 k98 GI take home in mint condition. Blue is still original and like it was the day it was sent off the assembly line. But like most gi take homes my bolt does not match not a big deal to me.

alvin 07-16-2013 07:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alanint (Post 236811)
Curious that a documented Luger should end up for sale at a local gun shop. These usually change hands privately.

Even more amazing was $1500 (or $1900?) containing the dealer's profit. So the previous owner voluntarily gave up quite amount of possible value. God knows, probably sold by spouse or son.... just a possibility.

It's a great find.

DavidJayUden 07-16-2013 11:19 PM

What amazes me, and I'm going to take a beating for this, is how nuts you guys go over than navy stamp. For heavens sake, most unit markings look like a monkey struck them, and they may have well been there for 95 seconds, not 95 years. You don't know.
My philosophy is to buy the gun, not the neat little markings.
Me thinks he got a fine Luger for the money.
dju

alvin 07-17-2013 08:50 AM

Special sign does create another dimension. I am surprised to see the Mauser 1934 Pocket with Eagle over M could go as high as $2000, but selling a regular nice 1934 at $700 was a very challenging mission. Paying extra dollars on it, buyer must look at the sign and feel fancy. If not, then lots of money can be saved.

alanint 07-17-2013 08:55 AM

David,
Luger collecting is all about variety and rarity. A single mark can place a pistol in a particular time, place and context, which is fascinating to collectors. While the condition of any pistol is the principal attraction, a rare mark is the icing on the cake and can make a simple purchase a serious bargain or investment.

DavidJayUden 07-17-2013 09:09 AM

I understand. Sort of. I just won't spend lots of money for markings that may, or may not, be genuine.
But take a step back here. We spend hours and hours agonizing over whether a gun has original finish, or may have possibly been properly and correctly refinished at some time in the last 100 years. We look for halos, blued toggle pins, re-stamped magazines, etc, etc, etc. We conjur up images of highly skilled craftsman "boosting" Lugers for an extra buck. (AKA, Death's Head.)
But come up with a gun with crude, X'ed out, crooked unit markings, and it's "Katie, bar the door while I break the cookie jar for my next Luger..."
I'm just sayin'...
dju

alanint 07-17-2013 09:26 AM

I appreciate your point of view and yes, perhaps less time and effort is spent on markings than on condition. In this case, however, we are focusing on a pistol that has been previously recorded and presumably, authenticated, as it was on Jan Still's list, (albeit with a transposed serial number).

I'm still bemused as to why it turned up at a gun/pawn shop.

Patronen 07-17-2013 09:38 AM

N4425 is not listed in Costanzo's World of Lugers so it must have materialized at some point, somewhere within an approx. 12yr. window.

Ron Smith 07-17-2013 10:04 AM

Of approx. 135,700 1940/42 Lugers produced, approx. 2000 of those were procured by the Kriegsmarine. Out of that 2000 how many have survived? Those "Monkey Stamped" marks are what tells a dedicated collector that this is one of the few that did survive.

When you take the time to study Unit marks in detail, it becomes fairly easy to distiguish fakes from original markings.

DavidJayUden 07-17-2013 12:20 PM

I appreciate your positions on the importance of history. And I do not mean to hijack the thread away from a very nice find.
Once again, congratulations on a very nice Luger.
dju

Cheesy411 07-17-2013 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DavidJayUden (Post 236868)
I appreciate your positions on the importance of history. And I do not mean to hijack the thread away from a very nice find.
Once again, congratulations on a very nice Luger.
dju

I don't considered the thread to be hijacked. Everyone's input and opinion is appreciated. Up until this post I didn't even know how rare an actual navy was. After all we all have the same common interest in the luger.

ithacaartist 07-18-2013 11:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DavidJayUden (Post 236854)
I understand. Sort of. I just won't spend lots of money for markings that may, or may not, be genuine.
But take a step back here. We spend hours and hours agonizing over whether a gun has original finish, or may have possibly been properly and correctly refinished at some time in the last 100 years. We look for halos, blued toggle pins, re-stamped magazines, etc, etc, etc. We conjur up images of highly skilled craftsman "boosting" Lugers for an extra buck. (AKA, Death's Head.)
But come up with a gun with crude, X'ed out, crooked unit markings, and it's "Katie, bar the door while I break the cookie jar for my next Luger..."
I'm just sayin'...
dju

The entire concept of collecting is, strictly speaking, irrational. The thing that makes collectibles valuable is all in our heads. In a sense, we're ALL "buying the story, not the gun". There is no real reason why one arrangement of steel parts is worth more than any other, except that it might serve a purpose better--in this case, it's to deliver a projectile to a desired location. Bottom line, we're all nuts, and wasting our time and money. Gotta love it!

Cheesy411 08-12-2013 07:55 PM

Well I just left the pawn shop! I finally have it. I will post more pics tonight


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