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01-17-2011, 04:37 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Seattle Area
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My Luger
I am new to the forum (today). I have a long barreled .30 Luger (got from my father) and have some questions. I believe it was made in 1903-04 time frame, but am not sure. How do I tell?
I test fired it 3 years ago after it had not been fired since 1950. The cartridges did not eject properly and I took it to a gunsmith. He suggested I use "hotter" ammo so I sent away for some Norma 7.65. No improvement. The next gunsmith replaced the spring. It had little effect. I put the gun away, but would now like to get it working. Any suggestions? Can I switch barrels to a 9mm and would that possibly help? |
01-17-2011, 04:52 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Irmo, SC
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Noooo..don't replace the barrel! you'll destroy half (or more) of the value of the gun. 30cal Lugers are usually more reliable than the 9mms, given the bottlenecked cartridge feeds smoother. Find a GOOD gunsmith who knows Lugers (search Lugerdoc on here). The easiest way to tell if your Luger is a very early model is by the toggles...the 1900 models have a scalloped (dished out) shape, where later guns have a full donut shaped toggle....see my post of today.
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