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Turkish Peabody Martini in 7.62 X 54 Russian.
I have a Peabody Martini full wood in 7.62 X 54R. It has Turkish markings on the metal and is in VG condition outside. The bore is another thing it looks really rough, I have it soaking with solvents to loosen it up.
Are the 7.62 X 54R Martinis rare?
Whats the best way to remove rust from a barrel?
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06-15-2011 09:24 AM
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Very doubtful
Originally Posted by
Albayo
Are the 7.62 X 54R Martinis rare?
Uh, well, not so much rare as non-existent!
The Peabody-Martinis were built for Turkey in the 1870s, in a chambering described as 11.43x55R. Another source says 11.43x41R. Quite possibly the cartridge was originally 41mm long, and later increased in length. In any case, after such a long time you would need to check the chamber before trying anything.
But one thing is sure: the Peabody Martini was a black-powder rifle. 7.62.x54R was the cartridge introduced with the Mosin-Nagant of 1891, as a smokeless cartridge. So please forgive me if I ask you: how do you know it is chambered in 7.62.x54R? An original Peabody barrel cannot be chambered to this size - it would have to have a liner fitted. Or maybe someone got really creative with a Mosin-Nagant barrel? Or fitted an Egyptian 303 Martini-Enfield barrel?
Please check really carefully what you actually have. Nothing is impossible when Bubba's around, but this sounds improbable.
Patrick
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 06-15-2011 at 05:13 PM.
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There are 7.65 x 53 Martini's used by the Turks. The were modified by Styer and have a special two stage extractor.
I would not call them rare, but they are uncommon.
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Originally Posted by
TheDoubleD
The were modified by Styer and have a special two stage extractor.
Were the original barrels lined, or did Steyr make new barrels?
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Way cool Albayo! Post some pics of your rifle, please! A very uncommon conversion, indeed!
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
Were the original barrels lined, or did Steyr make new barrels?
The 7.65 Martinis were fitted with a new barrel with the external dimensions of a small bore Mauser(Turk M1903?) and sleeved at the muzzle to take the Turk socket or sword bayonet.
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Originally Posted by
green
The 7.65 Martinis were fitted with a new barrel with the external dimensions of a small bore Mauser(Turk M1903?) and sleeved at the muzzle to take the Turk socket or sword bayonet.
The barrels were sleeved for the Bayonet? The British method was to sleeve the bayonet socket.
How did they deal with the larger receiver ring of the Martini?
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"Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair"
Well at least they didn't do this to the Peabody Martinis:
http://egun.de/market/item.php?id=3363624
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Originally Posted by
TheDoubleD
The barrels were sleeved for the Bayonet? The
British method was to sleeve the bayonet socket.
How did they deal with the larger receiver ring of the Martini?
Yes the barrels were sleeved at the muzzle to use the original Turk bayonet and British bayonets also fit fine.
What do you mean about dealing with the larger receiver ring?
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The Receiver ring of the Martini is larger than the receiver ring of the Mauser. Larger ring larger threads, larger barrel cylinder. How did they make the smaller Mauser barrel fit the larger Martini?
Do you have any pictures of that bushed muzzle. Be interesting to see that.