my profile |
register |
faq |
search upload photo | donate | calendar |
04-04-2009, 11:01 PM | #1 |
User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cave Creek
Posts: 315
Thanks: 55
Thanked 242 Times in 92 Posts
|
Please help with Arty stock I.D.
Hello, I recently purchased this stock from a dealer you all know and love. I trust him to have my best interests at heart. While I don't get screaming deals from him I feel that I get my moneys worth. Please speculate on the possible history of this piece. The stock has NO further markings, however I would like an opinion about the circular mark with the 3 punctures on the right side behind the iron. The holster mount holes have not been used to mount leather. I paid $725 Thank You in advance!! Joe
|
The following member says Thank You to calibrator for your post: |
04-04-2009, 11:51 PM | #2 |
Moderator
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Arizona/Colorado
Posts: 7,772
Thanks: 4,933
Thanked 3,124 Times in 1,434 Posts
|
Joe, These strange stocks pop up frequently. Pretty wood..Has the honey color of European walnut. I like the grain & the knot...The wood to metal fit is good. Has some patina. The strap slots are not beveled..Correct.
I don't like the serial #..too large and running linier to the iron. I don't like it on the wood either. The locking lever is smooth on one half of it? That's weird. The circular mark with 3 holes..that's unexplainable. I have looked at my share of stocks and have never seen anything like that. It's my belief that these may have been leftovers from WW1 and were not Imperial accepted military's. Have you looked into the stock block well and on the butt for any markings? I have one that is marked Germany in the side edges of the stock block well. Well hidden! As far as price...One just like it recently went off on Ebay for around $350. I collect military stocks and am not interested in those that do not have the Crown S-D etc. This one appears to be a period piece, just not a military. That being said..I believe some 1918 stocks may have slipped thru without the acceptance mark. Could be the pile that was sitting on the factory floor at the end of the war were not stamped as there was no Imperial anything left. Just hard to say. Jerry Burney
__________________
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." |
The following member says Thank You to lugerholsterrepair for your post: |
04-05-2009, 01:18 AM | #3 |
User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cave Creek
Posts: 315
Thanks: 55
Thanked 242 Times in 92 Posts
|
I guess they call it NORWEGIAN wood. If I were to speculate about the circular mark, I would say that it looks like the mark you see on the end of OLD chair or table legs that lost the metal button they put there to prevent damage. The Finns are known to have used these stocks with 4" PO-8s for some time after WW I. Could they have attached a standard type PO-8 holster to this stock using a similar style button some how ?? Thanx Jerry! Joe
Last edited by calibrator; 12-06-2010 at 08:31 PM. |
04-05-2009, 07:44 AM | #4 |
FIREARM HISTORIAN AND AUT
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Belgium
Posts: 1,535
Thanks: 106
Thanked 349 Times in 129 Posts
|
Hello,
I have one of this as well in my stock collection I guess they are part of the set that went to Finland and used with the P08. In my stock only the wood is stamped, the attaching iron it is not. Cheers, Mauro
__________________
Mauro Baudino - www.lugerlp08.com www.paul-mauser-archive.com Mauser Company and Firearm Historian - Mauser Parabellum Certification Service. |
04-05-2009, 08:56 AM | #5 |
Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: VA
Posts: 3,592
Thanks: 1,773
Thanked 2,529 Times in 787 Posts
|
I once visited a seller in the Phoenix area many years ago. He had a box of these stocks and said they came from one of the Scandinavian countries where they were used with ??? Well none appearded to have ever been used. None appeared to ever have had leather mounted either.
More recently I ran into an old gentleman who had one that he bought through the mail from a man in Lichtenstein who was making them. I think he said that he ordered his back in the 1980's. I'm inclined to believe the old gent here locally as his brother bought one also and they had no motivation to mislead me. Last edited by George Anderson; 08-26-2010 at 04:03 PM. |
The following member says Thank You to George Anderson for your post: |
04-05-2009, 09:56 AM | #6 |
FIREARM HISTORIAN AND AUT
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Belgium
Posts: 1,535
Thanks: 106
Thanked 349 Times in 129 Posts
|
Another example of wood stamped stock.
This is different from the one we discussed previously. Here some more pics of my wood stamped stock, it seems in any case old. Nice item, I like it and fit properly.
__________________
Mauro Baudino - www.lugerlp08.com www.paul-mauser-archive.com Mauser Company and Firearm Historian - Mauser Parabellum Certification Service. |
08-01-2015, 10:01 PM | #7 |
User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cave Creek
Posts: 315
Thanks: 55
Thanked 242 Times in 92 Posts
|
I bumped this forward to see if there were any new opinions on this stock. I need to get some sort of pedigree on it, as I need to start selling items to make room for things I actually use.
Thanks for any input in advance! |
08-01-2015, 11:21 PM | #8 |
Moderator
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Arizona/Colorado
Posts: 7,772
Thanks: 4,933
Thanked 3,124 Times in 1,434 Posts
|
Joe, to move forward a little..can you gently/carefully remove one of the stock iron screws ans see how much of it is threaded? SHOULD be about an eighth of an inch...
__________________
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." |
The following member says Thank You to lugerholsterrepair for your post: |
08-02-2015, 03:53 AM | #9 |
Patron
LugerForum Patron Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: South Lake Tahoe,CA.
Posts: 695
Thanks: 0
Thanked 70 Times in 56 Posts
|
I feel you should return it.
Too many questions. You can buy a Crown S proofed one for about the same price with the stock iron properly numbered. Bob |
08-02-2015, 11:25 AM | #10 |
Patron
LugerForum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: POB 398 St.Charles,MO. 63302
Posts: 5,089
Thanks: 6
Thanked 736 Times in 483 Posts
|
LPO8 stocks
Joe, Not sure about yours, but in Baudino's photos, the one on the left is from the 1923 Finnish purchase of 5000 surplus LPO8 stocks and the one one the right, with the Farsi numbering, is from the Persian LPO8 contract circa 1935 from Mauser. TH
|
The following 2 members says Thank You to Lugerdoc for your post: |
08-02-2015, 02:26 PM | #11 |
User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cave Creek
Posts: 315
Thanks: 55
Thanked 242 Times in 92 Posts
|
Thanks Tom,
Looking at Baudino's photo, I feel quite confident that the placement and style of the serial #s on mine and the example in the photo are a decent enough match to prove provenance. Since the 1923 Finnish purchase of LP08 stocks was for 5000 units, Mine having a serial # 4521 would definitely put it into this block if the Finn's numbered them sequentially. If the serial # were greater than 5000, I would quietly fade away. Thanks Jerry, Here's a pic of a screw that I just took out, seems to have the correct design you mentioned. With these 2 new pieces of info, along with Baudino's archive photo, I feel confident that this stock WAS part of the 1923 Finnish purchase. As a result, it seems this stock should be of special interest to Finnish collectors as a niche item. I do recall seeing photos posted on this Forum showing Finnish soldiers firing 4" P08s with stocks attached. |
The following 2 members says Thank You to calibrator for your post: |
08-02-2015, 08:22 PM | #12 |
Twice a Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Atop the highest hill in Schuyler County NY
Posts: 3,346
Thanks: 7,277
Thanked 2,578 Times in 1,365 Posts
|
This "if' is big, I think, unless someone knows for certain. It is my impression that stocks were numbered to the guns with which they were issued. Would the factory have serialized a single contract, of stocks only, unto itself... starting with 0 or 1? If they were check-fit/fitted to guns in Finland after they arrived, why wouldn't they also have been numbered to match those guns? I can't see a reason to serialize them, otherwise. We must also consider that fully half of all possible pistol/stock mated rigs within any 20's production block had numbers under 5000.
__________________
"... Liberty is the seed and soil, the air and light, the dew and rain of progress, love and joy."-- Robert Greene Ingersoll 1894 |
08-02-2015, 11:58 PM | #13 |
User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Cave Creek
Posts: 315
Thanks: 55
Thanked 242 Times in 92 Posts
|
Do you know (you're such an intellectual) that "IF" is the middle word in "LIFE"? You know what Col. Kurtz would say... Ask Rudyard Kipling... Throw Stones, or Throw Roses..., ???
|
08-03-2015, 11:05 AM | #14 |
Patron
LugerForum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: POB 398 St.Charles,MO. 63302
Posts: 5,089
Thanks: 6
Thanked 736 Times in 483 Posts
|
Lifer is correct. The "Finnish" stock will usually have their original German LPO8 serial, which is quite often crossed out and renumbered by the Finns to the PO8 that they issued it with. TH
|
08-03-2015, 12:00 PM | #15 |
Moderator
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Arizona/Colorado
Posts: 7,772
Thanks: 4,933
Thanked 3,124 Times in 1,434 Posts
|
From the screw threads and the wood to metal fit as well as the strap slots I think we can pretty much determine this is a German made Artillery stock no matter what. That's a good starting point..I am ignorant of Finnish stocks and their markings but is it also possible this might be a Pacific Arms? Or some other contract possibly?
__________________
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." |
08-04-2015, 09:03 AM | #16 |
User
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: North Georgia
Posts: 81
Thanks: 1
Thanked 27 Times in 9 Posts
|
Regarding the circle and the three holes, I would assume that the thickness of the stock was reduced using a surface plane up to the point where the stock needs to be thicker for the iron and in order to get the rounded cut they used a tool that was held in place by those three holes and kept flat by the circle. Probably done in a machine similar to a drill press.
__________________
Ed Reimbold I Need: For my 1936 P-08 Mag #5800 will trade Mag Al Stamped Blue #6859 k Straight Eagle 655 & #3502 n+St Eagle 63 For my 1917 Artillary Wood Mag #9220 I have #3392 f + |
The following member says Thank You to chromeed for your post: |
|
|