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  1. #1
    Legacy Member Eaglelord17's Avatar
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    1888 Commission Rifle

    Hi all,

    Just wanted to share with you all my latest acquisition. It is a 1888 Commission rifle. I am really not sure what to call this particular model as it is a bit odd.

    When I bought it I kinda jumped on it quickly as I thought it was a 1888'S' rifle (the variant which the 1888/05s were made out of and is also fairly rare as most were converted to 88/05s or 88/14s). Due to some pictures that only showed the receiver and the whole rifle, and the fact that it used the mannlicher clips still I thought it was a simple decision.

    Well I have it now, and it is a Turkishicon 'capture' rifle (wasn't advertised as one, however they didn't say it wasn't either), and it is a complete mismatch (only part that isn't is the barrel jacket and receiver). That all being said, I am still happy with it and I still paid a reasonable price for it.

    Now for the questions. This particular rifle was at one point a 88/05 rifle, which was then reconverted back to using mannlicher clips, by removing the charger guide, and the round holder (magazine lip?) from the receiver. The Turkish, apparently much preferred the standard 88/05 configuration as they would rather have the rifles using the same stripper clips as their Mausers. Would this conversion have been done by the Turks or by someone after being sold on the civilian market? It doesn't make much sense for either to do so unless someone wanted a .323 bore rifle with the mannlicher clips, or the Turkish ran out of 88/05 parts in the rebuild process and converted this back to the original configuration because of that.

    Also I know the barrel band isn't from this rifle originally, however I am interested in who the barrel band originally belonged to, so if someone would be able to identify the regimental markings that would be great.

    Any opinions are welcome, now for some photos








    Sorry about the blurriness of the above picture, the intent is to show the cut in the receiver for the magazine round holder.
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    Advisory Panel Patrick Chadwick's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eaglelord17 View Post
    so if someone would be able to identify the regimental markings that would be great.
    Done!

    The marking on the band corresponds to the Prussian marking scheme as used 1872-1914
    (see "Handbuch Deutscher Waffenstempel" p.108)

    9.R.J.2.224 = 9th Reserve Jäger-Batallion, 2nd Company, weapon no. 224
    Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 01-26-2016 at 12:08 PM.

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    Legacy Member bob q's Avatar
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    First you are making conclusions based on wrong information . The S has nothing to do with bore size and it does not mean the rifle is a 88 s . Most 88 s rifle were made after the 88/05 conversion. The Turks did not capture any Gew-88 rifles . They were given to them by Germanyicon as war aid from 1916 on and they later bought many more from the Czechs after the war . All the Turk rifles were 88/05 's , they had either the original German .321 groove bore barrels or .323 Czechicon made barrels . I have no idea who did that to the rifle , but since it is reblued I would think it was done over here , for what reason you could only guess . Maybe they had an old mag housing ? What is interesting is that you can see the old WELD marks where the charger guides used to be , so much for the guys who claimed they were riveted . A clearer photo would be great , but you should be able to tell in person that there is no rivet there .

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    Legacy Member Eaglelord17's Avatar
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    The 'S' marking as I understand it denotes the adaptation of the Spitzer cartridge and the opening up of the throat of the chamber to try and avoid over pressure (and as such did have no effect on the barrel size). This one is a .323 bore (slugged) so I am good to go in that regard.

    I always was told the 88'S' came before the 88/05 which was converted from the 88'S' configuration. Either way it doesn't matter too much, as it is neither (I plan on getting the 88 commission rifle book soon as these are interesting rifles, though their history is fairly convoluted).

    The reason I have the capture in quotation marks is I am aware that they were not captured, rather received in aid (much like how most people call Finnishicon Mosin Nagants captures when realistically very few were actually captured, most being purchased from foreign nations or already in Finland before there separation). Also didn't Turkey receive 1888 Commission rifles from Austriaicon as well, which were in the original 1888 pattern?

    The whole section is cut out, likely because it interfered with the mannlicher clips insertion. It is odd to see, and it really does have me confused as to who would do it. I know its been in Turkey as the sight is Turkishicon, as is the bolt markings, however I have never heard of them converting a 88/05 to a 88S style configuration.

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    Legacy Member bob q's Avatar
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    There are 3 main types of Gew-88 rifles , the most common is the Gew-88 -almost all of them will have the S stamp . There was no over pressure problem as the new S ammo was designed to be fired in the 88 , the bullet was .321 dia , the same as the groove size and the throat was already 3x longer from the old P-88 long rn bullet than needed for the much shorter S bullet . All the S means is the rifle was checked to make sure it would chamber the S round . Next was the 88/05 that had the guides for charger loading , a new made rear sight , a thumb notch for loading with the charger , the mag mods , and the receiver notch for the P-88 ammo to clear . The least common of the 3 was the Gew-88 S , it had the original rear sight modified for the S ammo and was marked on the stock . The 88/14 program was upgrade done as needed on what ever rifle type to make it as close to standard . The Turks never used any Gew-88 rifles , only 05's .

    ---------- Post added at 09:56 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:53 PM ----------

    Also the book will be a waste of time as it was done with no hands on research and just reworks most of the incorrect information that is on the internet . Just like the rivets , like your rifle does not have .

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    Legacy Member Eaglelord17's Avatar
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    So took the rifle out again to take a look at it, and apparently it was riveted not welded, you have to look closely with your eye to see the locations it was pinned on.




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    That is the circle left from the weld . The guides had holes in them that were filled with weld , the weld eats into the top of the receiver in a circle pattern . If it was a rivet , it would have fallen out when the top was cut off . The hole would go clean through the reciver.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bob q View Post
    The guides had holes in them that were filled with weld , the weld eats into the top of the receiver in a circle pattern
    That's known as plug welding, but I don't believe its weld you're seeing. The technology to do this, especially on such a small scale, didn't exist back then. Besides, the spots are too perfectly round for that anyway. The rings around the edges suggest to me they are holes that have possibly been tapped/filled with screws and made off flush.
    Quote Originally Posted by bob q View Post
    If it was a rivet , it would have fallen out when the top was cut off .
    If they was bucked good they wouldn't. Rivets bodies can be a bugger to drive out.
    Last edited by vintage hunter; 01-29-2016 at 11:29 PM.

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    Legacy Member Eaglelord17's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by vintage hunter View Post
    That's known as plug welding, but I don't believe its weld you're seeing. The technology to do this, especially on such a small scale, didn't exist back then. Besides, the spots are too perfectly round for that anyway. The rings around the edges suggest to me they are holes that have possibly been tapped/filled with screws and made off flush.
    Just goes to support what everyone has been told for years. I am still curious as to who made it/returned it to this configuration, however tomorrow I intend to shoot it, and depending on the result that will determine how long it sticks around for.

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    Legacy Member bob q's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by vintage hunter View Post
    That's known as plug welding, but I don't believe its weld you're seeing. The technology to do this, especially on such a small scale, didn't exist back then. Besides, the spots are too perfectly round for that anyway. The rings around the edges suggest to me they are holes that have possibly been tapped/filled with screws and made off flush.

    If they was bucked good they wouldn't. Rivets bodies can be a bugger to drive out.
    They have not been " bucked good " as there is NO hole on the bottom . They are not screws as it is to thin in that area [ with no hole drilled through ] to get more than about 2 or 3 threads in a blind hole . If you look up welding used in the military in that time frame , it did exist . Also I have knocked the guides off a rifle and they are a weld . The weld was strongest in the hole in the guide [ which makes the circle on the receiver ] and pulled a little piece of the receiver with it, just like in his photo , plus someone cleaned the stop up before they blued it .

    ---------- Post added at 11:04 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:58 AM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by Eaglelord17 View Post
    Just goes to support what everyone has been told for years. I am still curious as to who made it/returned it to this configuration, however tomorrow I intend to shoot it, and depending on the result that will determine how long it sticks around for.
    Back to your original question , who made it and why . It was not mine as I rewelded the guide back on the rifle I worked with . All I can guess is someone tried to make a Gew-88 out of a 05 when Gew-88's were hard to find . If you understand how a rivet works and what a plug weld looks like , your rifle clearly disproves the rivet .

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