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Unread 06-27-2003, 03:50 AM   #1
jasafn
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Post Model 1900 Luger

I have a Luger 1900 #10006 with a Stock lug (like later P08s). Pistol came to me bit reworked (barrel, main spring and grip safety) and I have been building it back to form it originally was.
Pistol have no other marks than:
"Crown over B and crown over U" on left side of toggle. (stamps pictured in Proof 1 number 3)
I assume my pistol was originally made for 4 3/4" barrel and that kind I am hunting for!!!

Does anyone have more info about these early special order Lugers with Stock Lug?

Years ago I saw one auctioned in UK. That pistol # 10003 had 7" barrel, stock lug and sliding rear sight. Pistol was called "Special Service Luger" and it was sold extremely high price.

All help very welcome.
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Unread 06-27-2003, 07:59 AM   #2
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Please do not replace anything on this pistol. The 10000 series is believed to have been set aside as prototype pistols.
Please post numerous pics of this Luger.
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Unread 06-27-2003, 08:24 AM   #3
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Jasafn, I agree with Wes for a change. Especially if you see stylized initials (GL) on the back of the rear toggle link. TH
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Unread 06-27-2003, 10:29 AM   #4
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Janne,
The gentlemen have given you very sound advice. It is extremely important that you post pictures before you make any modification to your pistol. It needs to be properly identified since, as Wes stated, it is possible that it is a prototype piece and may not originally have had a 4 3/4" barrel. Until you can post some pictures, can you give some details on the barrel, grip safety and mainspring? Thank you.
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Unread 06-28-2003, 01:01 AM   #5
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Gentlemen,

Thank you all for your help. I will take some pictures a.s.a.p. but I can tell this pistol never had any special rear sight. I am not sure about the original barrel but the one it came with was done from m/20 barrel no doubt. Grip safety was cut off and modified for safety catch new way. Leaf main spring was replaced with later P08s main spring with some tiny modification. All these reworks are removed now but nothing original was not ruin. I got the pistol about year ago and I have been doing research ever since. Parts have no serial numbers except upper receiver has #06 underneath. All main parts have same number "2".
The tiny leaf spring of grip safety was removed during the rework and when I bought a 1900 model spare part from States I got 1/3 too wide part.

There is no GL on rear of toggle. That I checked first when I bought this piece.
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Unread 06-28-2003, 04:25 AM   #6
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Janne,

Your description of your Luger raises some fascinating possibilities, given the serial number range of the gun.

The Dutch trials of 1899/1900 included a Luger with a non-standard barrel length, probably 155-160mm, and was fitted with a shoulder stock. No serial number or surviving example of this Luger has been found, only the description in the trials report.

From the 1905 Dutch trials, at least two surviving prototype examples of 1900 Lugers modified to incorporate a coil mainspring and eliminate the grip safety are known: serial numbers 10127B and 10130B. These serial numbers are a bit higher than your 10006 and include the â??Bâ? suffix, but they do not have a stock lug as yours does, so the possibility exists that your Luger may be a variation of the Dutch prototypes.

Since you state that in your Luger the â??Leaf main spring was replaced with later P08s main spring with some tiny modificationâ?, and â??Grip safety was cut off and modified for safety catch new wayâ?, it sounds very much like the modifications made for the 1905 Dutch prototypes. Do the modifications to your Luger look like the work of a professional gunsmith?

We all will be very interested in the photos of your Luger when you can provide them!!!
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Unread 06-28-2003, 11:04 AM   #7
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Hi, Ron and guys,

You asked if the mods look like the work of a gunsmith.

A better question would be whether the mods look like tool room work. It is not always easy to tell, but there are signs that experienced collectors look for that are not really possible to describe. Those changes sound like the kinds of things experimental tool rooms do rather than the kinds of things gunsmiths do for customers.

I fully agree that the gun should not be changed without serious research and that any parts taken off be retained for re-installation.

The serial number "2" alone would be an indication that this is not a run-of-mine pistol that some "bubba" hacked on.

As for the "GL", IIRC that was put on special guns made up for Luger's personal use or to be given as gifts. A tool room gun would almost certainly NOT have the initials and could look rather crude since the idea was to prove a concept rather than to make up a gun for sale.

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Unread 06-28-2003, 12:05 PM   #8
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Could this piece fit into the 7 inch barrel Comerical 1900 (~500 made) with stock lug, mainly for South American export (according to AArron Davis' book, page 6), or the "American Eagle" version as listed #14 (7453), page 2 of Ralph's new list #243, somehow ending up in Finland??? All interesting speculation. Would love to see pictures!
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Unread 06-28-2003, 02:17 PM   #9
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Based on the information provided, it appears that Mr. Salopuro's Luger is a 1900 Commercial Model in the low 10000 serial range with a 7" barrel and a fixed sight which has received some modifications. According to the serial numbers I have recorded, serial #10004 (in Finland with 'GL') and #10005 (in England with 'GL') are both tangent sight models and serial #10007 is a fixed sight model. It is my opinion that between 5-10 tangent sight pistols were made in the very low 10000 serial range with none higher than serial number 10010. It is recorded that there are more fixed sight models than tangent sights models in the 10000 serial range.

There is no strong evidence that these pistols were destined to South America market and they could have been sold to any client/customer in any part of the world.

It will be interesting to observe the modifications made to this pistol.

Albert
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Unread 06-28-2003, 05:34 PM   #10
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Albert,

I think you are exactly correct about the probable origin of Mr. Salopuroâ??s Luger. Thank you for the listing of known 10000 range (without the B suffix) Lugers. It is interesting that Janneâ??s Luger fills in the gap of known pieces:
10003 - Observed in a UK auction by Mr. Salopuro
10004 â?? Finland
10005 â?? England
10006 â?? Finland (Salopuro)
10007 â?? Fixed sight model (Is this the one in Kenyonâ??s â??Luger: The Multi-National Pistolâ??)

Kenyon postulates that the range of these Lugers is 10,000-10,050. Bob Simpson had one of the 10000 series for sale for some time that came with a reproduction â??push-buttonâ? stock. I do not know if he still has it. As I understand it, these early Lugers will not fit an artillery, navy or later carbine style stock. The stock lug grooves of the 10000-series Lugers are machined differently and the dwell, or notch, in the lug that is engaged by the stock iron cam is either very shallow or totally absent. I think that the attribution of these early pieces to a South American market is that the provinance, according to Kenyon, of some of these pieces originated in South America, and the existence of a factory manual for the 7â?/Push-button stock Luger that is written in Spanish.

I am still taken with the modifications to Janneâ??s Luger, since it sounds so much like the Dutch prototypes. It does not necessarily mean that it was a Dutch piece (I have modified a 1900 frame to adapt the coil mainspring myself) but given the era of the piece, it is a possibility. I really want to see pictures of the gun!
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Unread 06-28-2003, 10:18 PM   #11
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Ron,

According to my notes, serial #10007 used to belong to Mr. Serri, and it is not the one in the MNP book. Interestingly, Geoff has the correct stock for this pistol which is on his tangent sight model serial #10005. The push-button stock (no holster) came out from Mr. Visser's collection in the late 1980's.

Apparently, the finest fixed sight model known to exist is serial #10034 which has its matching stock/holster and straps which surfaced out of Chile in the 1980's.

You are correct in pointing out that these 10000 series pistols with push-button stock lugs will not accept a later stock, and the size and position of the notch will vary between each pistol. In most cases, the attaching iron from another 10000 series Luger will not allow the button to lock/snap into place if used on a different Luger in the same serial range.

Although a spanish manual is known to exist and a few of these Lugers have come out of South America, we cannot assume that this was the main market for these fixed/tangent sight Lugers. I have seen another manual in French, and I would not be surprised if one existed in German, English or another foreign language.

I have heard similar 'theories' on the Mauser Flatside 20-Shots because a few have come out of Central and South America, but these 'theories' are starting to fade and the same likely applies to the fixed/tangent sight Lugers.

I would like to discover where serial #10008 and #10009 are snoozing!

Cheers,
Albert
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Unread 06-29-2003, 03:40 PM   #12
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Jasafn,
your pistol seems very interesting. Please let us know if the stock has a push-button instead of the usual pole-lock.
Ciao
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:10 AM   #13
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Hi everyone,

Here is some pictures:
Stock lug:

<a href="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006stocklug.jpg" target="_fullview"><img src="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006stocklug.jpg" width="400" alt="Click for fullsize image" /></a>
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:14 AM   #14
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<a href="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006numbers.jpg" target="_fullview"><img src="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006numbers.jpg" width="400" alt="Click for fullsize image" /></a>
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:20 AM   #15
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Left side view:

<a href="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006left.jpg" target="_fullview"><img src="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006left.jpg" width="400" alt="Click for fullsize image" /></a>
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:25 AM   #16
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Right side:

<a href="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006right.jpg" target="_fullview"><img src="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006right.jpg" width="400" alt="Click for fullsize image" /></a>

Unfortunately I need to low pixels to get fit down to 180KB. (NICE photos Janne, Photos in the last four posts have been thumbnailed by Admin-JS to appear in each post rather than the URL for the photo...just click on the photo to see the full size image)
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:32 AM   #17
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The numbers "2" inside the pistol.
number in breech shows baddly in the picture:

<a href="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006number2s.jpg" target="_fullview"><img src="http://boards.rennlist.com/lfupload/10006number2s.jpg" width="400" alt="Click for fullsize image" /></a>

(This photo has also been thumbnailed to appear...click on the photo to see the full size image. Admin-JS)
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Unread 06-30-2003, 11:49 AM   #18
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J. Salopuro,
Do you still have the barrel?
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Unread 06-30-2003, 07:37 PM   #19
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J. Salopuro,

In one of the photos, it appears this pistol had a grip safety at one time. Was the metal filled in (with metal) or is there still a gap along the edge of the left side wooden grip panel...?

I cannot tell from looking at the photos...

Regards,

Pete... <img border="0" alt="[typing]" title="" src="graemlins/yltype.gif" />
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Unread 06-30-2003, 07:57 PM   #20
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</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana,Tahoma,Arial,Helvetica,Geneva">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="Verdana,Tahoma,Arial,Helvetica,Geneva">... and I have been building it back to form it originally was. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana,Tahoma,Arial,Helvetica,Geneva">

What do you mean? What alterations have you done to this pistol?
How was the spring modified?
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