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Unread 05-12-2013, 12:08 PM   #1
HUGO REVELES
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Default magazine prototype P-08 mfg. 1901

are saying?
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Unread 05-12-2013, 02:38 PM   #2
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Not really. Or better 'really not'

Looks like some home made thing from the 1970s.
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Unread 05-12-2013, 11:12 PM   #3
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germany ? made in
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Unread 05-12-2013, 11:31 PM   #4
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and now this reviewer
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Unread 05-12-2013, 11:35 PM   #5
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frommer stop
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Unread 05-12-2013, 11:40 PM   #6
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The next iteration was the Model 1906. The first few 1906 pistols retained the early 10-round blind magazine, but the design was soon revised to use a more modern but smaller capacity 8-round removable magazine (which would serve as the model for the Luger P08 magazine). The Model 1906 was chambered for a proprietary cartridge, the 7.65 Frommer. This model is also very rare, with only about 800 made. They were tested by the Austrian military, but lost out to the Roth-Steyr (which would be made in the same factory where Frommer worked).
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Unread 05-13-2013, 12:06 AM   #7
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Home?
if I believe that if it was made at home
but Frommer Rodolf house in 1900
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Unread 05-14-2013, 09:14 PM   #8
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I sincerely doubt that he would have used aluminum for the base in 1900 ....

It looks like whoever made it used as zig-zag spring as well, again something that was not common in those days.
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Unread 05-15-2013, 11:17 AM   #9
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Hugo, Is this magazine a .22 caliber?
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Unread 05-15-2013, 11:36 AM   #10
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The round in place is a bottleneck round. It looks like the typical .30 Luger, or as Hugo has pointed out, a 7.65 Frommer.
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Unread 05-15-2013, 11:50 AM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HUGO REVELES View Post
The next iteration was the Model 1906. The first few 1906 pistols retained the early 10-round blind magazine, but the design was soon revised to use a more modern but smaller capacity 8-round removable magazine (which would serve as the model for the Luger P08 magazine). The Model 1906 was chambered for a proprietary cartridge, the 7.65 Frommer. This model is also very rare, with only about 800 made. They were tested by the Austrian military, but lost out to the Roth-Steyr (which would be made in the same factory where Frommer worked).
Hugo,

I'm not making much sense of this. If the Frommer 's 8-round magazine was introduced in 1906, how could it have been the prototype for Parabellum, which used the 8-round mag in 1900?

Also, I'm wondering when an aluminum bottom was first used on any pistol--Borchardt and Luger were wood back then, which material persisted for this purpose for 20-30 years for the Luger. (I have no idea when Al was used by other mfgrs.)

The angular compression spring Gerben points out--when did any pistol first use the radial compression spring in its mag?

I don't think the round that sits in the mag in the pic. is .22, judging its appearance/proportions--but it might explain a 10-round capacity for the initial blind mag system.
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Unread 05-15-2013, 07:58 PM   #12
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The follower button , aluminum bottom and the mag body all look like the cheap Mexican copies I have seen.
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Unread 07-26-2013, 01:20 AM   #13
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Early magazine 1900 production not perfection
they later evolved.
In previous test some time trail
magazine this could have been a test
made in a workshop production as a project
i send photos to detail
sorry for my english
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Unread 07-26-2013, 02:31 AM   #14
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Vlim:
wood was common in 1900
for military testing in 1900 aluminum was used
experts could confirm
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Unread 07-26-2013, 03:30 AM   #15
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pictures magazine rare mark
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Unread 07-26-2013, 03:37 AM   #16
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Default magazin mark rare

pictures magazine
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Unread 07-26-2013, 07:20 AM   #17
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That is some pretty bad welding. Again this points towards some locally or home made contraption, probably just to create a functional magazine for a pistol that was lacking one.

Nothing experimental about it, other than an experiment in making an ugly magazine
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Unread 07-26-2013, 07:30 AM   #18
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When copies are made in many places, they also mimic markings like the "Germany" on this mag's base.
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Unread 07-26-2013, 09:27 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HUGO REVELES View Post
Vlim:
wood was common in 1900
for military testing in 1900 aluminum was used
experts could confirm
yes, they can confirm that aluminum was not used on luger magazines until the mid 1920's

no matter how hard you want to believe this is a special magazine, its not period correct
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Unread 07-26-2013, 09:37 AM   #20
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I would have to agree. This is a locally made, (Mexico) magazine that some gunsmith produced to fill a need, since products like this are extremely hard to obtain in Mexico.
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