![]() |
Frankenluger!
6 Attachment(s)
Hello all. New to the forums and a new Luger p08 owner. I have picked up quite the frankengun (except for the Upper, lower, barrel, and safety lever). I bought it as a shooter and to say that I have a Luger, though fortunately I didn't pay a whole lot for it. It shoots great, so I am not upset.
Anyone seen a mismatched jumble of parts on a 1942 BYF Luger like this before? (Has a what looks like worn out import mark under the barrel, can't read what it says) Could it be a capture pistol that was just thrown together? |
Hi and welcome to the forum! As for your frankenluger, that has been a bit of an ongoing discussion as of late. In short, they could have been mismatched at any point. Some guys build them. Mine is all matching except the toggle train, but some of the guys build them with almost zero matching parts. All that matters for you is that it works!
|
I can't see detail of the marking on your gun's barrel well enough to make out if it is an import mark or a British proof mark. I think I see "9mm" in the text... From the info below, it's probably an import mark.
The large "X" stamped behind the serial number digits on the left side of the receiver indicate that this was a WW-II Russian captured pistol. The grainy finish appearance looks like the gun was dip refinished in their rework (but flash photography makes it difficult to judge finish). The magazine is earlier than the pistol, either a police magazine or something from the 1930's... The base may provide some clues. The replacement parts were likely installed as part of their rework, but anything was possible. The left grip has been hand re-checkered, and it's uneven. That points to someone having their hand at it at home, not a professional armory. It's also got the million dollar chip - evidence that someone that was unfamiliar with Lugers took them off the frame at some point. You have a good shooter built from a Mauser pistol. Enjoy! You may find our forum FAQ document useful. Download it from the FAQ link at the top of every forum page. Welcome to the forum, Marc |
I can make out enough of the importer's marking on the barrel to say that it was brought in by CAI St Albans VT.
|
well, I have made a number of frankenlugers - I always have parts and when I happen to get a frame and upper (I am looking for a Simson upper for ME!!) and I have made DWM, Mauser, Erfurt shooters
Its fun to bring parts back to life - an upper might be all roasted and pitted, yet the frame is nice or the other way around. Ed |
Quote:
|
Quote:
https://i.imgur.com/24aKhBy.jpg |
I have a shooter Luger with far more mis-matched parts than your "new" Luger. Mine shoots 100%, and it is my favorite range Luger. Welcome, and enjoy!! :cheers:
|
I may just try to piece it together over time to match but I'm in no hurry. What is the correct magazine for this pistol (I only have the one displayed but would like more). In just random internet searching, fxo marked un numbered mags?
|
Quote:
Thanks doubs, I can definitely make it out a little better now. |
Well Brennan .... I like it :)
And as ED says 'Its fun to bring parts back to life' Welcome to the 'forum' brother ... nice gun. |
Quote:
Congratulations on your acquisition. IMO you have started out with Lugers in the best way - a pistol with some non-matching parts with the major functional parts matching, at a good price. This will let you get to know the pistol and consider where your interests lie. Many including me get a first Luger thinking it will be just one, instead it becomes a first step on an enjoyable journey. I have a mis-matched Mauser Luger similar to yours and greatly enjoy it. |
Never mind a "frankenluger" I think you've got a nice shooter there, and since you're not a collector enjoy what you have!
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:28 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1998 - 2025, Lugerforum.com