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#1 |
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User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Texas
Posts: 302
Thanks: 496
Thanked 356 Times in 138 Posts
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Here it is Jussi,
Seems to be a regular artillery slab stock with Finnish markings. As you can see the 1954 and Y mark are in the groove for the lug connection device. Any idea what the T represents below the SA on the slab side? |
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#2 |
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User
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Finland
Posts: 250
Thanks: 77
Thanked 53 Times in 31 Posts
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Hello.
T=Talousvarikko. You could translate it as "the Maintenance Depot". |
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#3 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: ...on the 'ol Erie Canal...
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Quote:
Inasmuch as you have removed the attaching iron, are you sure it is for the Luger and not the Lahti??? The gripframe lugs are similar but the lock/cutout location is different...
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I like my coffee the way I like my women... ...Cold and bitter...
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#4 |
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User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Texas
Posts: 302
Thanks: 496
Thanked 356 Times in 138 Posts
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Richard,
I have never examined a Lahti stock or attachment device. However, your question forced me to play with my stuff. The pictured upside down stock attachment is identical to my other artillery rigs and accepted the Artillery Lugers that were inserted. This is a Luger Artillery stock.
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| The following member says Thank You to Dick Herman for your post: |
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#5 |
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User
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Finland
Posts: 250
Thanks: 77
Thanked 53 Times in 31 Posts
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There were only some prototype and test shoulder stocks for the Lahti. To find a genuine is really hard.
Most moving around are repros. And even they are rare. |
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#6 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: ...on the 'ol Erie Canal...
Posts: 8,208
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Quote:
The stock-holster you have shown is very cool; but I was hoping that Dick had a Lahti board stock that he had no use for...So I could buy it from him and use it with an altered Luger artillery holster for my 'artillery Lahti'... ![]() Making a curved attachment iron is outside my skill zone right now; I'm having a hard enough time making a straight one...
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I like my coffee the way I like my women... ...Cold and bitter...
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#7 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: The Capital of the Free World
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Quote:
My suggestion would be either a rotary table cutting the inside curve,... or to do it on the cheap, put the raw attachment iron in a good vise and use a specially ground tool in a fly cutter in your vertical mill that is set up for the appropriate cut radius... Then walk the tool into the iron SLOWLY...
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regards, -John S "...We hold these truths to be self-evident that ALL men are created EQUAL and are endowed by their Creator with certain UNALIENABLE rights, and among these are life, LIBERTY, and the pursuit of happiness..." |
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#8 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: ...on the 'ol Erie Canal...
Posts: 8,208
Thanks: 1,425
Thanked 4,474 Times in 2,343 Posts
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Quote:
Here's a pic of the two gripframes...I don't have my verniers handy (I'm taking a motherboard to the PO) but except for the locking notch, the curve looks quite close... I've seen pics of Lugers with attached board stocks that were at a Gawd-awful angle; I'm guessing that the stock was a Finnish board stock, locked at the Luger notch...Lugers & Lahtis are the only gripframes with external "T" lugs... I have a Mauser stock iron that I'm using as a design aid, but I really need to find a Luger repro stock iron...
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I like my coffee the way I like my women... ...Cold and bitter...
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