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07-25-2015 04:24 PM
# ADS
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Nice pistol, I've always wanted one of those.
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Those British
proof marks........ I hate to call them proof marks, I'd prefer to call them butchery marks - are absolutely outrageous. Words just fail me at the sheer bodgery, thoughtlesness and butchery at the hammer and punch wielding imbecile who a) did it and b) the manager or overseer who let such work pass........ Disgraceful.....
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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"Jung" and "Haug" are both German
family names.
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Rather a neat barrel graft! I think it might be a 9mm Luger barrel that has been fitted by screwing it into the bored and threaded stub of the old barrel. The front end, of course, turned down and fitted with the C96-style foresight.
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 07-26-2015 at 06:27 PM.
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
I think it might be a 9mm Luger barrel that has been fitted by screwing it into the bored and threaded stub of the old barrel.
I think maybe...it looks like it anyway and makes sense.
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Thanks guys. You may be right pat, it does look like that is a possibility, I will look at it more closely tomorrow. I wonder if a German
or a brit did the conversion
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Patrick,
Thank you, you are most likely correct
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Probably Capture in WW I ( leather style is typical), and then re-done in Britain
, maybe prior to WW II. Birmingham Proofing, (pre 1950s).
Germany
did a lot of "commercialising" post-1920 of WW I C96 guns, usually fitting a Luger barrel to the Barrel stub ( with Luger front sight.) these will bear German Proof house (commercial) Markings.
Being "short Barrel", it is probably the original Barrel, cut off, rebored and sleeved back into the stub, and rechambered. The work is very craftsman-like, probably done by a Good Birmingham or London 'smith ( if London, would have gone to the Company of Gunmakers London Proof House, so must be Birmingham or close by.).
Nice example.
Doc AV