Hello and welcome to the forum.
Your gun is a Luger only in the sense that an intellectual property lawyer can apply a trademark to something other than that which is generally known.
Stoeger purchased the right to use the name "Luger" in the 1920s...since then, they have owned it and applied it to a variety of handguns. Legally, these are all "Lugers" by virtue of the Stoeger trademark. They are Lugers in the sense of bearing the trademarked, brand name only.
From a collector's and practical standpoint, these are pieces of crap that should have gone into the scrap metal program decades ago.They were not sucessful commercially as they simply didn't work well and the buying public recognized the canard for what it was.
Maybe my bias is showing.
Tom A.
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