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Payment types accepted are: PayPal, Personal Checks, Money Orders and Western Union |
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...Wait! PayPal allows CC substitutions!!! :thumbup: You could 'back door' the payments!!! :D |
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just don't mention that "bad" word: g-u-n-:eek: |
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Cards also serve another purpose - obtaining refunds if the vendor does not perform.
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PayPal
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I do not take CC directly at this point,\ we are working on it, unlabeled PayPal will work in small installments. But also why you need a Credit Card, If i provide a payment plan anyways. we can do $500 a month of 10 payments for the 2 remaining unit, Or $250 a month for 20 payments for 3ed lot that is in the works for end of 2018 better then a card, as there is no interest on it ;0) |
Magazines
2 Attachment(s)
magazines made this week
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You know, Eugene, that long barrelled .45 on the left just might have my name on it...
dju |
I had not noticed this before...Maybe I missed the announcement...But Eugene has a finished 'Baby' .45 Luger in his forum album...
http://forum.lugerforum.com/picture....pictureid=3608 http://forum.lugerforum.com/album.ph...pictureid=3608http://forum.lugerforum.com/album.ph...pictureid=3608http://forum.lugerforum.com/picture....pictureid=3604 I gotta say,,,That is one butt-ugly baby... ;) (Pun intended!) :p |
butt-ugly is in the eye of the beholder :)
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I'd say that I'd like to shoot one, but the last time I said that it cost me a lot of money...
dju |
Baby Luger
I ordered one of the Baby Lugers and a baby P38. Love the look !
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Eugene, How many individual steps are involved in construction of one of your beauties? How many have you made so far? What model is your most popular?? Do you ever take a day off? Eric
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and still can not keep up with incoming orders, restorations and gunsmiths work and 45 manufacturing. Too meany steps to count right now. Manufacturing, hand fitting the guns, testing Making every little small part, springs winding, testing Some operations are done on manual machine, testing Lanyard loop manufacturing and installation. Barrel timing and head spacing, testing Grips manufacturing and fitting and checkering. Magazines, bending, fitting and nickeling, testing Did I say testing already ? And that what i can remember from 3 year process of hand. We are up to number 46 of Lugers in 45 caliber. #46 was assembled last week for running tests on the magazines, as our #43 Target Prototype was snatched up by a forum member, and #4 prototype is been horded by Guns and Ammo for over 3 month. We still have two prototype frames kicking around just in case. We call them scratch and dent, as they were the first of the machine. We use them for prototype work. Like first Baby Luger 45 and first Target Model 45 that sold recently. I am planing to make a carbine out of one as soon as water ripples settle from delivery deadlines of the guns that have been ordered already. We have finished manufacturing parts for first 50 in June of 2017, and racing to the next 50 units, hoping to have the parts done in June of 2018 or sooner. Prices have gone up a bit, but only because of Federal TAX of 10% on sporting goods, guns included if we make over 50, And we really hope to make more then 50 next year. Most common ? 1 Carbine Order 2 Baby Luger Orders 3 Target Model orders 40 Standard size guns My favorite to shoot ? Target model to boot. less recoil, faster return to target. Liked the grips I made for myself, but someone snatched them along with the target model. But then,I always like Navy Lugers more then others. Based on advertisement postings and number of views, Target model generates almost as much interest as standard gun. Ask away. I will share as much as I can, or have time too... |
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And they are big and detailed... Hard to miss :jumper::jumper::jumper: Click and scroll , baby scroll .... http://www.lugerman.com/Pages/MainPages/Luger45.html If I may post the link |
Thanks for the update, and don't forget the poor guys waiting for repairs.
dju P. S. All's well with the .45 Target model. I just have too many other handguns that need my attention at the moment. Thanks for your help! |
Have any of you been in touch with, or heard from Eugene in the last week or two?? I've been trying to get in touch with him by both phone and email for an update for a couple of weeks now and it's been radio silence.
Hopefully he is OK and just very busy. Lyn |
Yes, he was busy answering a post from an irate customer who want his deposit back on the other luger site!
I've emailed Eugene and didn't hear anything but did talk to him Saturday, after I left him a message and he called back. He is ok, and very busy as usual- too busy to return emails, but don't give up. |
Sorry,
guys... Trying to catch-up after a return from business trip. Spend some time in Georgia , meeting the writer for a next article, and doing some testing. Spend 2 days at the range testing Luger 45s on ransom rest. We are working and testing on the next batch of 6 this week. This batch is 2 weeks out. 5 guns went out last week, that was 3 weeks effort. We test them more now, to make sure the ammo of all types feeds fine. we put 200 rounds thru each gun, but we can not amount to the ammo count of what each gun owner will do . So more testing will be clients responsibility. |
Testing!
Hi Eugene, was mine one of the (6) that went out?..... BTW, I think you should test same as they did for the military.. I viewed a war time clip where women were testing 1911A1's I forget what maker, but they weren't Colt, anyway, it appeared that they proof fired, and then ran two full mags and then a final cleaning and inspection, and out the door so to speak! I would think your success rate would temper your testing, and also a cost factor would seem to loom large as time goes on?... :)….. It does for me on drums! til...lat'r....GT
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We figured 200 rounds is far less costly then dealing with shipping back and forth of the gun that was not tested all the way
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testing
OK Eugene, I see, anyway, is mine on the way! can't wait to hit the range!.....GT
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Keep us posted G. T. Always eager to hear the "new toy" stories...
dju |
I'd want one ot work also - but it seems that 3 weeks to fit and finish a tried and true product (you've sent out 30+ or them?) would be like a weeks worth.
Is it really a 3 week process to fit and finish? or is the truth that - it hinges on you and you put in a solid day, then 2 hrs the next day, nothing, then a solid day :D |
Well it's 2-3 weeks for 5 guns,
to test fire, in house range session, tweaks, open range session test, Rust blue for a week. Assembly test fire and shipping. It's about 3 days per gun start to finsih. And there are restorations in between. |
Who owns an original Luger 45... need it for reference for a movie made on the production of the 1907 Reproductions
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Forum, Jan's forum has a complete thread or two on this. Its called a search feature, works wonders ;) Short of it - there is a .45 cal Luger in the Robert W. Norton Gallery, in Shreveport, Louisiana. I have seen it - even after telling him I was writing an article on it (I was attempting to), they would not even let me see it without the glass. A 2nd one that was sold, then while Krause had it, he took measurements. You know the rest of that part - it did get sold, the seller was annoynmous So, unless you have pull with the Cajuns in Louisiana - |
To all of our patient clients,
Who trusted us with development, production and testing of their long awaited Luger 1907 45 reproductions: Below please find an update of the current state of development. While we are getting the guns ready for shipping according to the times of the original dates. About a month ago, we have ran out of the first 100 magazines that were made, And we are in process of reworking the magazine production process. Trying to shorten and the production time and increase durability of the magazines. Testing of a prototype number 4 showed that after about 9000 rounds, magazines develop Some level of fatigue and started showing deformation around magazine button. After talking to our heat treatment specialist, we decided to switch to a different material And currently experimenting with 17-7 Stainless that were supposed to improve stability of the form after magazines are hardened and reviewed there possible deformation after heat treatment process. While these experiments are ongoing, We are proceeding with bending and forming of the next 100 units of magazines. Currently production of the magazines is a slow and very QC involved process with a speed of 5 magazines a day. And while the guns are been prepared for shipping and tested, we cannot send them out unit a set of 100 magazines is finished and heat treated and individual units are tested in the guns. Heat treatment is a lot job and only cost effective when done on all mags at once. All of this development is slowing down the shipment. We have also improved our testing protocol … As earlier units proved to be sensitive to the ammo selection. We are currently testing every Luger 1907 model with 200-250 rounds of ammunition as market availability permits , from 10 to 12 different ammo manufactures to insure maximum possible reliability of the handguns. Ammo tested: Fiocchi, Perfecta, Winchester, Remington, Federal Brass, Federal Aluminum, American Eagle, Blazer Brass, PMC, Lawman, Sellier & Bellot, Wolf, Tula Ammo, Armscor, Black Hills About a month ago, we have acquired a Ransom Rest and several guns were tested for accuracy. We found that we can consistently reproduce groups of 0.9 to 1.2 inch of 5 shots at 25 yards out of most pistols we tested. Please let us know if a delay in deliveries conflict with anyone’s plans and expectations. FYI: because of increasing costs of material, production costs, continues improvements and testing, any new orders placed from this point on will be priced at $6975 for a Classic 1907 Model. Prices are subject to change without notice. All confirmed orders placed before this date (7/7/2018) will maintain, previously advertised price. Thanks |
Targets
4 Attachment(s)
Targets from 5/29/18
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no offense meant - but I highly doubt most people will shoot 9,000 rounds through their 45 luger. thats $2,000 minimum in ammo
- again, no offense, but I think you are over-thinking this. Simply guarantee the magazines for 5 yrs and replace one if it has cracks or issues. A nice shooting gun is one thing, but a perfect gun requiring constant upgrades is no profit.... |
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Especially now that there is a new AutoMag. ;) |
A new Automag?
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I doubt any of the original stamped/folded 9mm mags will go 9K rounds without a problem!
Maybe the Folded/welded Haenel mags might ? Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good! JMHO. |
Eugene needs to take care of the original group of us who made deposits. I ordered a baby 45 and in Feb ordered a baby P38 and gave him a deposit. At the time he said 4 to 6 weeks on the P38. It has been a year and 4 months.
How many other members here have a deposit on a 45 and still waiting for delivery ? I am sure none would be concerned about a mag that lasts 9,000 rounds or a pistol that will run a large variety of ammo. Most of my olympic target pistols favor one manufacture over another. All of us knew in advance this project would take quite some time but at 72 I can't wait TOO many YEARS. |
Not to change the subject, but I took my .45 Luger over to the range again (for only the 2nd or 3rd time). It shot very well with both steel case Wolf ammo and some commercial FMJ stuff. Still prints a bit low and left, but not bad and not important enough to warrant scratching the bluing by replacing/drifting the sight. It really is a sweet gun to shoot, good trigger, long barrel, very ergonomic, low recoil, etc. I know the Lugerman would like me to wring it out more, but too many other projects calling my name...But thanks, Eugene!
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For sure, $7k would be a deal buster; 5k was tough enough!
But that will make the ones extant more valuable, I guess. Few will be made in the future, so total numbers will be smaller. |
It is interesting to see that you are not only succesfully recreating a classic handgun, but are also subjected to exactly the same problems that the original Parabellum producers faced.
The sheet metal 08 magazines were always an issue in the past. Most problems were solved by the milled / welded Haenel magazines in the 1930s. You may want to look into reproducing a Haenel magazine in .45 ACP. It may solve a lot of problems and ease production. Also what killed the Parabellum in the old days were the manufacturing costs, Mauser had optimized it's production pretty well in the 1970s but still struggled to make a profit. Krieghoff's attempt in 2009 cost about 13,000 Euros per gun … So you are not doing that bad :) |
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