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#1 |
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Obama LAND
Posts: 206
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Thanked 17 Times in 14 Posts
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Hey guys, I had seen this post and noticed a lot of you and said how this weapon was dipped. I had a 1921 DWM Police Weimer Luger that I bought in 1986, I was 21 at the time and knew little on Lugers, (This was my First) I just knew that it was refinished but not Buffed , but I was told the finish was original, but I knew it wasn't, but did not know about dipping, It was a 1986 Surplus Boom gun from Century arms. WHY DID they dip these? What was the point? All edges were sharp, there was evidence of pitting, and than the dip over that, vut damn it wasn't that bad, why did they want to do this? And what was the process? Like a cold blue? The Luger cost me 465.00 dollars in 1986, and it was all matching, totally. But dipped, so righ tnow this would still have little value? I wish I still had it.
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#2 |
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Washington State
Posts: 99
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I would love to see a good set of pictures to learn the tell-tale signs of a dipped gun.
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#3 |
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Obama LAND
Posts: 206
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Well identifying a dipped gun is easy, it has a blue black like color, and the coating, finish would be on top of nicks, pits etc.. Example, like a massive scratch on the gun, but there is no bare metal, just the continous color of the finish.
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#4 |
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: louisiana Now, but from the Rebublic of Texas
Posts: 937
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and it looks dipped/lol.
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#5 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: NY
Posts: 40
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Sad thing is there are likely quite a few DDR/GDR (German/English version) guys still around that could at least explain what was done exactly and why to those 1950s East German re-works. I would be curious as to the standards for barrel replacement, hard to believe that many Luger barrels were beyond serviceable to warrant large scale re-barreling.
Many questions, few answers, just really cool dicked-with Lugers and speculation ![]() |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Kaufman County, Texas
Posts: 48
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I asked a German Vopo gun collector that lived in the DDR. I was told that the replacement barrels came from Czechoslovakia (at the time), most likely from CZ who had also produced P38 barrels for the Wehrmacht.
The ammo used in WWII had corrosive primers and those were hard on the barrels. Many of the P.08s were disassembled, blued and reassembled from the stash of parts, worn or bad parts replaced. East Germany made many parts for the 08, my Vopo has the disassembly lever made in the GDR, the 2/1001 mags were made at in the GDR. I was told, that the Volkspolizei had the guns reblued every few years as long as they were in police service. When the police could replace them with the Makarov or Hungarian FEG pistols, the p.08 were given to the workers brigades and other units. They most likely did not have qualified armourers, as the police had. I have three Vopo Lugers and they are all decent shooters and personally feel that they deserve the increasing collector's interest that is just starting. I can complement my small collection of Vopo Lugers with a Zeiss 7x40 EDF binocular and a Zeiss 8x30 with MDI stamps that had been used on the infamous watch towers. |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: NY
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Hey "andyd" those are some cool DDR collectables, and VERY interesting information.
They must have been super anal about their barrels, notwithstanding the primers, I have seen plenty of RC P08s and P38s w/ their original barrels certainly in good enough shape for service, or at least better than what many Vietnam Vets claim their Colt 45 barrels were in when issued. Could someone edify me on the difference between an East German Luger rework w/o the VoPo shield and one with, as to where they likely ended up within the DDR. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Kaufman County, Texas
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As far as I know, many Vopo 08 were captured Russian guns that were given to arm the Vopo, those have the Russian X on it. The absence of the X is most likely indicating an East German rework. The Deutsche Volkspolizei was not the only armed unit is the GDR. The DVdI (Deutsche Verwaltung des Innern) issued the first "Dienstvorschrift: Die Pistolen der Polizei" in 1949 naming nine 9mm and 25 other pistols. Since the P.08 had been the serive pistol of the recently lost war, most men were familiar with it and there were enough guns and parts around to arm the police, Betriebskampfgruppen (workers brigades) and the Grenztruppen (border guards).
There are P08s with various other markings than the Vopo starburst with the inspector's mark inside, the plainclothe police units of the "Kripo Dresden" for instance. The guns were usually repaired at local Waffenmeistereien for smaller problems and sent to Suhl for major repair, that is were they got new barrels and were usually proofed, crown N for final proof, Crown U for inspection after final proof, crown R for "Instandsetzungsbeschuß" after a repair. The stamp with three of four digits is the date of proofing; 753 for July 1953. All this info is taken from the German Visier magazine 9/1991 that has a special on Vopo guns. |
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