WW II bring back
I just finishing cleaning a WW II bring back for a friend. His older brother gave it to him several years ago when he didn't have long to live. It had been put away and not played with, etc. for perhaps all of these 65 years. His brother captured a German tank and it's crew and took the Luger from the tank commander.
It had some residue from being fired but not a great amount. But it had a whole lot of brown, hardened cakes of gunk in the workings. The chamber was over-whelmed by powder residue and the guey brown substance and wouldn't have taken a cartridge. The barrel was entirely clogged with the brown, guey substance and took at least 20 minutes of concentrated efforts to clean out. My guess is that where it had a light coat, it dried solid and in the barrel it was so tightly packed that it hadn't totally dried (even in 65 years) and was just very guey, slimely.
Anyone have any ideas of what the substance may have been? It wasn't noticeable on the exterior of the gun. The barrel and all of the interior is in great shape but also is the exterior. It's a fine specimen of a 1939 S/42. The bluing only has a few very small places of holster rub. Sitting in the holster for 65 years didn't seem to cause it any harm. The holster and gun appeared to be covered by the dirt and grime from the battlefield. The stitching on the top (the lid) of the holster is coming out but is the only problem with the holster. The surface of the holster shows signs of being used for the entire 6 year period, to the end of the war. It came from France, I think.
Since it's my first encounter with what I presume is an untouhed weapon of 1945 I just wondered if the man might have been coached on preserving it for the future generations or perhaps just had the insight.
Whatever it was it didn't harm anything that I could tell.
thanks,
Jack
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