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Got Luger!
Hey all, I'm new to the forum and new to Lugers, but I know a little bit. Here are some pictures of my new Luger. I paid roughly $1700 for it (I traded a rifle), its a 1940 S/42, all matching including mag.
I'm just looking for some general information, and I hear this forum are where the experts are! Any good or bad info would be great, just want some knowledge on my piece of history! http://img709.imageshack.us/img709/5047/dsc08110u.jpg http://img188.imageshack.us/img188/9339/dsc08113g.jpg http://img704.imageshack.us/img704/4433/dsc08112b.jpg |
I guess I will step in and let you hate me. The gun is refinished and the grips are reproduction. I do not believe it is worth what you paid for it. I have made the same mistake and so have many others...you are not alone. I hope you can get your money back or at least $900-$1000 of it.
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Better you than me, Ron...
Like Ron said, the finish is way off, should be all salt blued with no strawed parts. The grips usually have only the last 2 numbers, usually very faint, not all so clearly stamped. Anyway, welcome aboard and ask away if you have other questions or want more opinions. dju |
Yeah, I kinda figured it was refinished, but I really didn't want that rifle, haha.
How can you tell the grips are repro? They are #ed to the gun (sorry for the sloppy picture) |
The fact that they are numbered to the gun is a real alarm ringer because they are not original grips. The screw hole on the back of the grip is a means of holding the grip to a fixture during final shaping and checkering. This is not a feature found on original grips. Someone has made a deliberate forgery by numbering these fake grips to the gun.
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Win 94,
I will go out of my way to make a joke........there is definitely a "crook" in your county. That one is not even close to being right. Sorry Jason |
Welcome to the Lugerforum. Sorry we have nothing but bad news for you. The good news is that the mausers are some of the best Lugers for shooters since the metalurgy improved over the years that Lugers were made. So if you keep it, shoot away and enjoy it.
Because it has been refinished, and the fact that reproduction grips have been numbered to match the gun, that makes the rest of the numbering suspect as well... the Mauser "bump" on the frame ears is also conspicuously absent, leading me to believe that the gun has been assembled from parts from different manufacturers Best of luck with it and I hope it shoots well, and that any future time you spend here will be at least slightly more pleasant. |
Well thanks for the info everyone.
I'm a little bummed out, but this piece will become my shooter, I should not have to worry about the condition too much, as the 'new' finish should hold up longer and I won't have to worry about damaging the original finish. I hope to be looking into another Luger sometime soon, not sure what kind, but I really like the Artillery Lugers. As long as something is original on my gun, thats really what I want to matter. I've got the proofs & the year, & the history, which is most important to me. |
The toggle train, or at least the forward toggle is a replacement. A 1940 date should have a 42 code toggle. The S/42 code ended early 1939. That shouldn't affect the function though. Enjoy it. Lugers are very accurate and fun to shoot.
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Like Ron said we all have paid too much at a certain point ... is the price you pay when you are learning and addicted to militaria in general!!!
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Trade-in is hard to return. Otherwise, there are nicer Lugers on the market. But the seller only wants cash:
http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/Vie...Item=163816078 |
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