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#21 |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
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Welding and re-machining a Luger frame to original specifications would take an extreme amount of work and getting all the subtle shapes just right would require a real artist with a torch... and a full machine shop. I would venture to say that it would be VERY expensive procedure...
The simplest way to restore a stock lug would be to obtain a damaged frame and have a "stock lug-ectomy" transplant operation. It would take much less effort (read that as much less expensive..) and final finishing would result in a much nicer final product with all the original grace and engineering intact. Since the all-matching gun has already been altered by grinding the lug off, repairing it should not depreciate it's value at all, and will likely increase it's value as a shooter.
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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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#22 |
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Patron
LugerForum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
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M, I do have several rear grip strap sections available, from just the stock lug section @$50 to the whole rear 1/3 of the frame @$100. Hopefully you can find someone here on the Forum with the welding talent to install it for you. TH
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#23 |
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Join Date: Jan 2011
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Thx. guys
![]() At first I just liked it and didn't know anything what the effect of the grinding had on the gun because it looks so perfect. I read some of the posts on the de-valuation and I had several thoughts that might be something to think about. I'd like to share them with you but I need a little time to organize what I want to say and how to say it, so as soon as I write it I'll post it. M |
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#24 |
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"M, I do have several rear grip strap sections available, from just the stock lug section @$50 to the whole rear 1/3 of the frame @$100. Hopefully you can find someone here on the Forum with the welding talent to install it for you. " Lugerdoc
---I don't understand. It has a strap (kinda square) holder on the back. ...I'll think I'll need a picture of what you mean and what it takes and is needed. thx M |
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#25 | |
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Lifer
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Quote:
TIG welding is shielded inert gas atmosphere welding...using a tungsten electrode...pretty much any good welding shop can do it for you...Mating the two parts together so everything is in the right place is the trick...Might be a good idea to make a jig to hold them... This part of the grip frame is a non-stress area. It should work out fine.
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#26 |
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Thx., P
I see now what he was talking about and it does look like it would work. M
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#27 |
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Hi guys,
Here's some of the thoughts I had about Lugers that had their "stock lug ground off" or altered in some way or another. If you look at the point-of-view the collectors have towards these guns it appears that only original unaltered guns would be worth selling at a very marked up price, which equals more profits. I gathered this just by looking at the prices of original equipment and guns. Well then, if they are looking towards making as much $ as possible, since they are collecting and ready to sell at the right price, I believe we are missing out on something. ---And btw. I hope I'm not stepping on some toes for imo. they also do appreciate German master craft. These original Lugers, that had their stock lug ground off, represent a part of history and are surviving as a memento or reminder as what happened to Lugers overall. If we don't they will be phased out and we will be left with missing evidence and history. What I read somewhere was that the U.S. government didn't like guns that would hold 32 cartridges, therefore making it almost impossible to do so. Plus, with no added stock probably to make it less efficient for long range, As you notice only the stock lug was ground off so that it would be hard to add the stock and the Snail Drum, the rest of the gun was left alone. So now we are left with queries as to really why was this done; when was this done; and most importantly why would this alteration make these original Lugers less than what they are? Imo, this makes this piece rare with its authentic mark of its history that other guns didn't undergo. And still, even with its scars, is a Master Piece regardless what anyone does to it, ![]() M |
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#28 |
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M, I do have several rear grip strap sections available, from just the stock lug section @$50 to the whole rear 1/3 of the frame @$100. Hopefully you can find someone here on the Forum with the welding talent to install it for you. TH
__________________ Lugerdoc, I think I'll take you up on your suggestion along with Postino suggestion. It sounds great. ---Watch for my email. When I try it I don't think this would degrade my gun since there is a big difference in the intention of the actions. Someone defaced it and I would be trying to rehabilitate/restore it or make it better, ![]() M |
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#29 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2010
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#30 |
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To clarify the stock grinding phenomena;
It had nothing to do with magazine capacity. The high capacity magazine silliness did not come under legal scrutiny until the assault weapons law of 1994. What collectors were reacting to was the provisions of the original national Firearms Act, (NFA) of 1934, which prohibited any pistol with a barrel length of less than 16" from having an attached shoulder stock. The curio and relics list was created to extempt certain historically important firearms from these provisions, if they were originally produced with the shoulder stock, (i.e. Navy and Artillery Lugers, C96s, etc. ). Cofusion as to what was and was not legal led to many Lugers having the stock lug groung off to put an end to any question of legality. (It is still illegal today to place a shoulder stock on a 4" standard Luger). Aside from any lugs which may have been ground off overseas, this is the main reason this occured here in the US. |
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#31 | |
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Lifer
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Quote:
![]() As for rod, I'm thinking 1/16" 4140 ANNEALED ROUND ROD...I'd cut the two frames in the same two places, then bevel the cuts...I'd hand brush the cut & beveled surfaces with a [new] stainless steel brush to remove any rust/scale/contaminant, make up a jig to hold the pieces in place, use a Miller Shopmaster 300 TIG welder with water-cooled torch and foot rheostat, and put enough weld on the joints to machine away until I get the desired contours...On my cheap Chinese 3in1 mill... ![]() ...Or maybe if I'm lazy, just grab a coat hanger and weld it up with that...(That's more likely)... ![]() Edit: Since this is a non-critical area, you could mill the cuts flat and silver-solder or braze the lug section to the grip frame...Silver-solder will take some bluing...Only a light line will show...
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Last edited by sheepherder; 03-04-2011 at 07:42 PM. |
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#32 | |
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Quote:
It would still be very interesting to know if it's possible to get a nice finish on welded parts. I have managed to get some pretty good results on the weld itself, but there's always a dark halo around the perimeter. Would pre-heating help?
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#33 |
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Join Date: Jan 2011
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alanint,
Boy that sure clears up things, thx. I did think, if you wanted, one could still use the Snail Drum even if it might be a little heavier holding without the shoulder stock. M |
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#34 |
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#35 |
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Don, I have seen maybe 10 in the process of restoring around 300 shooter Lugers. That will give you a rough percentage from one source. I did not think to keep track of them and I dont take a lot of pictures anymore. Sorry I was not more help.
BTW, I know Hub has fixed some of them the way John Sabato mentioned. Also, when he makes the Baby Lugers he cuts out a portion of the frame all across it and rewelds it using special mandrels/heat sinks to align the frame/magazine well. The cut section actually rusts blues pretty good.
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Thor's Luger Clinic http://members.rennlist.com/lugerman/ Ted Green (Thor Yaller Boots) 725 Western Hills Dr SE, Rio Rancho, NM 87124 915-526-8925 Email thor340@aol.com ----------------------------------- John3:3 Jesus answered and said to him, "Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." |
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#36 |
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Patron
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Don;
I dont know if this will help but my 1920 Commercial DWM .30 Cal., 3-7/8 barrel shooter serial #633 (o) has the stock lug ground so heavily there is a hole in the back grip strap. |
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#37 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Feb 2009
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Quote:
...I couldn't believe that...I had to take my 30 cal commercial grips off and look...Sure enough, you are correct - there is a long rounded cavity in the backstrap where the recoil spring fits (drill hole)...and your hole looks like it is right at the bottom of that cavity... ![]() ...I didn't think the backstrap was that thin...
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I like my coffee the way I like my women... ...Cold and bitter...
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#38 | |
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Barring receipt of new information, I have concluded that two Weimar-era police units removed stock lugs, almost certainly at the insistence of French occupation forces: * The Hessische Polizei (H.P.) in the occupied portions of Hessen recieved newly manufactured Lugers from BKIW (in the upper u and lower v series) in late 1929 and/or early 1930. There are many examples and all have their stock lugs very professionally removed. There are a number of older Lugers with H.P. markings that do have stock lugs. I believe these were issued earlier to the Schupo outside of the occupation zone. * The Prussian Schupo in the occupied city of Wiesbaden also removed stock lugs very professionally. Although only three examples are known to me, I a very confident that this modification was done during the French occupation. They all are marked S.W.II. (See HWIS Chapters 8 and 16.) Based on this, I think it is highly likely that any Luger with a ground stock lug that is not marked H.P. or S.W.II. was altered here in the good old U.S. of A.
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Regards, Don donmaus1@aol.com Author of History Writ in Steel: German Police Markings 1900-1936 http://www.historywritinsteel.com |
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#39 | |
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Quote:
M
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#40 | |
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Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Feb 2009
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Quote:
![]() No...I was referring to the channel that the recoil spring fits in...
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I like my coffee the way I like my women... ...Cold and bitter...
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