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Mauser k98 detachable magazine
Mauser k98 detachable magazine





mauser k98 detachable magazine mauser k98 detachable magazine
  1. Mauser k98 detachable magazine manual#
  2. Mauser k98 detachable magazine full#
  3. Mauser k98 detachable magazine series#

Why they would care on a gun intended to be fired at arm’s length is a good question.Īnother factor was that some designers of the early autoloaders were concerned that the length of the cartridges (like the 7.63 x 25mm) couldn’t be accommodated in a grip-mounted magazine without rendering the grip too long front-to-back for a proper hold.

Mauser k98 detachable magazine manual#

The front-mounted magazine was conceived mainly to allow for the bolt travel of the manual repeaters and early self-loaders without having the bolt going too far aft in the shooter’s face.

Mauser k98 detachable magazine series#

If you ever watched the old Sci-Fi Channel series “The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne”, one of the latter showed up now and then in the hands of Phileas Fogg, apparently supposed to be some form of (for the 1870s) top-secret advanced self-loader prototype, since you never saw him racking the action by hand. There were also a few with Winchester-type under-barrel tubular magazines and lever action mechanisms, one by Mauser, another by Osterreich, and a couple from Belgium. The multiplicity of early designs with the magazine out in front of the trigger guard may have been due to the numerous manual repeating pistols such as the Bittner (1883), Krnka (1886), Reiger (1886), Passler & Seidel (1887), and Laumann (1891), all of which had either clip-loading, enclosed Mauser-type box, or (in the case of the Krnka) a Mannlicher-type rotary magazine “up front”. The 1893 Borchardt, the direct ancestor of the Parabellum, seems to have been the first self-loader with this arrangement. The Salvator-Dormus 8mm (1894), Silverman-Maxim (1896), and Schwarzlose Standart (1896-97) all had their magazines in their pistol grips. Reach the train station to win! Kill all the train robbers to win! Do whatever it takes TO WIN! Because believe me, you don’t want to lose!! (add any of your favorite “toys” to this list!!!) 20 round C96 or Carbine version of C96, including M1917 trench carbine with 40 round mag.ġ4.

mauser k98 detachable magazine

Paul Mauser’s recoil-operated selbstladegewehr familyġ1. Mauser Zig-zag revolvers (both the solid frame version and the hinge-frame version)ĩ. Carbines of the Gewehr98 family (namely the Kar 98 a and the WWII K98)Ĩ. Any long rifles of the Gewehr 98 family (sniper and 20 round trench variants are around for some reason)Ħ. 1896 Mauser rifles chambered for 6.5 Swedish Mauser or 7×57.ĥ. 1889 Mauser rifle variants chambered for 7.65 ArgentineĤ. Regular C96 pistols (you may dual wield if you prefer)ģ.

Mauser k98 detachable magazine full#

Given a choice of Mauser weapons, which one (or ones) would you grab up if you were on a train and horse-riding train-robbers were coming your way? I’ve left the following in a box car (and presumably you and your friends are guarding a very big safe full of gold bars in that box car!!!!):ġ. I thought the biggest round capacity before the M712 was only for the shock-trooper M1917 C96 carbine variant with 40 round detachable magazine…







Mauser k98 detachable magazine