LugerForum Discussion Forums

LugerForum Discussion Forums (https://forum.lugerforum.com/index.php)
-   Off Topic & Other Firearms (https://forum.lugerforum.com/forumdisplay.php?f=142)
-   -   .30 Mauser (https://forum.lugerforum.com/showthread.php?t=26057)

Conny 04-27-2011 12:00 AM

.30 Mauser
 
Ok guys,
I have always liked the 7.63 Mauser round but cannot find a decent pistol chambered for it. I know....C96, Astras, bergmann, etc....
I'm thinking of something more modern. Here is the question:

If you were going to convert any modern pistol to chamber the 7.63 Mauser, which would it be?

saab-bob 04-27-2011 12:31 AM

Duane
A late model Russian Tokarev is a nice pistol and very reliable. I like the ones with the reddish brown grips.
No rechambering needed,it just uses a hotter version of the .30 Mauser cartridge.:jumper:

The Bergmann and the Astra 400 pistols are chambered for the
9mm Largo cartridge not the .30 Mauser. I have never shot a Bergmann,I have shot a Astra 400. It has a good kick!:eek:

Bob

Conny 04-27-2011 01:06 AM

Thanks Bob.
Just to be clear. The 7.63X25 (.30 Mauser) can be fired through a 7.62 Tokarev chambered pistol?

WG dog 04-27-2011 06:42 AM

I've read and heard for years that 7.63x25 Mauser can be fired in 7.62x25 Tokarev weapons, but haven't actually done this myself.

Here's a link for what it's worth.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7.63x25_Mauser

I looked into this when the CZ 52 pistols arrived and the 7.62x25 Tok was hard to find in non-corrosive ammo. You might try the 7.63x25 Mauser ammo in a Tokarev or CZ 52 pistol. I don't know if the 7.63x25 Mauser ammo is hot enough to reliably cycle the CZ 52 action. Don't know about converting a more modern pistol to 7.63x25 Mauser.

Still have a CZ 52 pistol and 7.62x25 Tok and 7.63x25 Mauser ammo around here somewhere, but it's on zombie reserve status.:p

Patronen 04-27-2011 09:15 AM

With regards to the CZ-52 I have also heard of the 7.63 may not work the action everytime. I have never tried the 7.63 in the CZ-52 and don't recommend it. The CZ-52 has a reputation for having a tight chamber wich I found out firsthand(individual guns will always very) and it can be finicky with ammo mostly with surplus. Some people use a spin test with the surplus ammo but new factory 7.62x25 is the way to go if you shoot the CZ-52. I wouldn't use the 7.63 Mauser in a 7.62x25 gun but that is me.

Vlim 04-27-2011 11:38 AM

Herbert Werle did an LP08 in .30 Mauser. :)

jonnyc 04-27-2011 06:49 PM

During and after WWI, both the Russians and Soviets purchased 7.63 Mauser pistols. They began producing the cartridge in the late 1920s. Around 1929-1930, the USSR chose the Tokarev designed TT-30 pistol for service. At that time they renamed the 7.63 Mauser cartridge 7.62 Tokarev. That's it...they are dimensionally the same round. I won't get involved in the "which is hotter debate" as pressure varies greatly between different producers and countries. Some German and Czech 7.63 Mauser ammo was loaded quite hot for both pistol and SMG use, and some East Bloc 7.62 Tokarev ammo has tested rather light.
Personally, I would have no qualms about using Polish, Romanian, Chinese, or Yugoslav Tokarev ammo in a well-maintained and sprung C96 Mauser pistol.

Patronen 04-27-2011 07:33 PM

2 Attachment(s)
A comparison on paper of the two.

jonnyc 04-27-2011 09:51 PM

FWIW, you could post the same measurements from 2 different Tokarevs, or 2 different Mausers, or 2 different 9mm Parabellums and get the same kinds of variation due to different manufacturing tolerances.
Dimensionally, the Tokarev and Mauser rounds are basically identical and inter-changeable.

sheepherder 04-28-2011 06:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jonnyc (Post 194032)
FWIW, you could post the same measurements from 2 different Tokarevs, or 2 different Mausers, or 2 different 9mm Parabellums and get the same kinds of variation due to different manufacturing tolerances.
Dimensionally, the Tokarev and Mauser rounds are basically identical and inter-changeable.

+ 1

I might add, the 30 Borchardt is the same cartridge as well. :p

Patronen 04-28-2011 08:18 AM

I oftern wonder when you see specifications on cartridges, especially older ones, do they measure examples of cartridges to come up with the data or take it from original blueprints of some sort?- Your spot on when you say about the variations of the same cartridge by different makers.

jonnyc 04-28-2011 05:22 PM

Postino, you are right. You can also add the 7.65 Mannlicher to that list, but I do believe that the Borchardt and Mannlicher rounds were loaded to lower pressures.

sheepherder 04-29-2011 07:53 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Jon & Patronen -

I get all my measurements from The Handloaders Manual Of Cartridge Conversions, by John Donnelly. Donnelly did not measure or inspect all the cartridges he lists (one per page, 1054 pages), he copied reports from various sources, the principle one being Cartridges Of The World, which is where data on all three 30 cal cartridges commented on here were taken. The data in this book concerns the shell, not the load or bullet.

Personally, I believe the cartridge manufacturers and reamer manufacturers/distributors have, over the years, combined differently named cartridges that have dimensions within manufacturing tolerances under one name. (Or, conversely, mark the same reamer/cartridge with different marks).

A good example is that 24 minute angle addition to the 16º neck angle shown on that diagram. I seriously doubt that any manufacturer is going to hold to that exact dimension...

jonnyc - I have had too many C96 & M30 Mausers with beaten locking block abutments to even think of firing anything but a target [read: light] load in them...and then only with a good abutment...Here's an example of a mildly beaten abutment...

conehammer 05-01-2011 12:46 PM

Are you guys mixing dimensions and loadings? I believe I read where someone said the Borchardt cartridge was the same as the others? I think it would be best to say the cartridges are similar only dimensionally. I have c96 pistols ( duh) as well as a CZ52. I once had a Tokarev. Dimensionally they were similar and that's it. I would never fire ammo designed for the latter 2 in a C96. I've never been fortunate to own a Borchardt but 1) I'd never fire it 2) if I had to fire it for some reason I'd use a light c96 load.

When I first started loading 7,63 Mauser in the 1970s I first used the standard 85 grain jackets then permanently switched to a hard lead lubed bullet.

jerry

sheepherder 05-01-2011 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by conehammer (Post 194273)
Are you guys mixing dimensions and loadings?

No. :)

Quote:

I believe I read where someone said the Borchardt cartridge was the same as the others?
I did. I also wrote in another post above - "The data in this book concerns the shell, not the load or bullet." I should have been more specific and said "cartridge case", not shell or cartridge. My bad. :p

sheepherder 05-01-2011 01:58 PM

3 Attachment(s)
jonnyc, my manual shows the Mannlicher cartridge case being straight, not bottlenecked...

Here's the other three; data taken from Frank Barnes' Cartridges Of The World 4th Ed [1980] for all three...

There are some differences; whether actual or typos, I don't know...Caveat emptor... ;)

lugerholsterrepair 05-01-2011 02:41 PM

Dave Borjes and I teamed up to determine a loading for a Borchardt as we planned to shoot it at a small private sub machine gun shoot in VA. The cartridge case we used was the .30 Mauser..We could find NO loading data for the Borchardt anywhere so we guessed. He loaded low and lower. The lower loading kicked the cartridges out just to the right of the shooter. The slightly higher..but still low loading.. kicked the cartridge case out 10 feet to the right and back of the shooter. Both of these loadings activated the Borchardt , extracting and loading a cartridge properly. The pistol was constantly checked by the owner thru all 80 rounds fired for abnormalities and none were noticed.
Probably 20 guys at the shoot were able to fire 3 rounds each from the Borchardt..only one Woman at the shoot was interested in shooting it..my Wife Ellie. She fired 5 rounds.

TennBill2 05-01-2011 03:14 PM

Mauser chambering
 
Interesting discussion. As I try to get my homebuilt 'Borchardt' ready to shoot, I used a Tokarev finish reamer to finish reaming for the 'Mauser'/Borchardt round. My intent is to wind up with a soft 30 Luger load. To check my work at this point, I've taken Starline Mauser shells and used primers only to test headspace/firing pin....fires fine! Chambers a standard 30 Mauser round nicely...but wouldn't think of firing it. Since I don't know how to duplicate the Borchardt mainspring, tension wise, I'll probably start with an absolute minimal loading to test cycling, and work my way up. I've debated enen using BP so as not to overstress the parts. I read where the original Borchardt had a terrible recoil......all the way to Ron Wood reporting, here, it was very smooth. Makes me wonder if some guy way back decided, since it fits, 'I'll just use Mauser rounds',..or worse, a Tokey round.

lugerholsterrepair 05-01-2011 03:33 PM

Bill, We used spent 30 Mauser cartridges..These seemed to be what it was made for. I would have to ask Dave for the exact loadings we ended up with. The pistol had very little percieved recoil..we fired it with the stock attached. It was very smooth. I regret not thinking to fire it without the stock..I would have liked to try that.

Vlim 05-01-2011 05:29 PM

2 Attachment(s)
Here is a little line up I did a few years ago, listing the usual suspects :)

And a scan of a possible Borchardt round, next to a DWM 7.63 Mauser round.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:38 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1998 - 2025, Lugerforum.com