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1918 Erfurt Luger
My dad sent this Luger home during WW2. I was wondering if anyone has any information they could give me about this pistol. Number is 4549 and what looks like a g. The barrel is frosty but it shoots pretty good. I have to push the toggle down most of the time. The bullets seem to be tight when putting them in the magazine. The magazine spring feels real strong and the top of the mag seems tight, the bullets are hard to put in. Not sure if that would cause the bullets not to feed or if the mainspring might is weak. Thanks for your help.
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Thank You to yoopercollector For This Useful Post:
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08-22-2016 10:01 PM
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If you have to push the toggle back down after a shot, you probably need a new mainspring; easily obtained from Wolff Springs in the US. You´ll find a number of instructional videos about how to instal the spring on the net. The `frosty´ barrel might even improve after cleaning. The mag is usually fed using the screwdriver tool with the hole over the button on the mag.
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Advisory Panel
I agree, the main could use a replacing. Hard to say about your mag without it in hand but use the loading tool as suggested and it may cure all your problems there. Order a new main though, shooting with a poor one will beat up the frame.
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
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You normally need 2-3 Luger mags to find a good runner. New mags are cheap, buy 2-3. Good luck.
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Thanks for the responses. I ordered a set of Wolff springs with an extra 40lb recoil spring (mainspring), waiting to get them. I just got back from the range, I am shooting Speer Lawman 115 gr TMJ. They seem kind of long for the magazine. They touch in the front of the magazine and seem to bind when loading them. I'm going to pick up come 124 gr and try them also. The magazine I have is the original one that came with the pistol. The spring set I ordered has a +10% round magazine spring in it, just have to figure out how to take the magazine apart.
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Original mag??? PLEASE, do not touch it. Buy 2-3 mags from CDNN, cheap and runners. You will damage a collector mag and be unhappy in the end. Good luck.
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Calif-Steve For This Useful Post:
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You don't really need plus power springs, just new ones.
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Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
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Thanks, the spring set I ordered comes with a plus power mag spring. I will try the regular mainspring spring first but ordered a 40lb spring just in case. Don't want to pay $4 shipping for an $8 spring if the 38lb one is to weak. I also ordered a set of springs for my Browning 1922 .32 auto, seems to not eject every time. I will do as Calif-Steve says and order a couple spare mags from CDNN instead of screwing with the original. Any one know which is better, the ones made in Italy or by Mitchell Stoeger? They are the same price. Thanks for all the help.
Last edited by yoopercollector; 08-27-2016 at 09:11 AM.
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Thank You to yoopercollector For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
Have a good look at the original mag, if there's any anomalies at all, they could be at fault for the problems. It doesn't take much for a Luger mag to be put out of whack. On the other hand, you may find thay all operate the same and it's the cartridge length of the ammo you have. They sound a bit long...
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I use Italian mags (couldn´t call them `cheap´ though), as they work a loit more reliably than the originals. ALL my Lugers work well with any standard ammo. Has the barrel improved with cleaning?