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#1 |
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are saying?
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#2 |
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Not really. Or better 'really not'
![]() Looks like some home made thing from the 1970s. |
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#3 |
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germany ? made in
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#4 |
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and now this reviewer
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#5 |
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frommer stop
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The following member says Thank You to HUGO REVELES for your post: |
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#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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#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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#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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#9 |
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Hugo, Is this magazine a .22 caliber?
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#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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#11 | |
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![]() Quote:
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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#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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Jerry Burney 11491 S. Guadalupe Drive Yuma AZ 85367-6182 lugerholsterrepair@earthlink.net 928 342-7583 (CO & AZ) Year Round 719 207-3331 (cell) ![]() "For those who Fight For It, Life has a flavor the protected will never know." |
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#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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#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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#15 |
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pictures magazine rare mark
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#16 |
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pictures magazine
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#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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#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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#19 | |
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![]() Quote:
no matter how hard you want to believe this is a special magazine, its not period correct
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#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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