Ebook's Content
Luger pistol producers
- Who produced Luger pistols
- German Map with locations
Erfurt Lugers - Historic
details
-
The arsenal's origin
- The production
strategy
- From Erfurt to ERMA
- Detailed production board
Markings on Erfurt Lugers
-
Three types of crowns can be found
- A host of
various control stamps
- The Crowned RC, standing for "Revisions
Commission"
- A Crowned P marking
- Unit markings are also found
An Erfurt Luger back from
East Germany
- An ERFURT Luger
that had a very long service life
- The pistol was
drafted into service in East Germany
- The pistol was modified during the thirties
- New proof markings were applied
- A unit marking which relates to the
Düsseldorf Police
- The police administrative district codes
The Royal Spandau Arsenal
-
Initially, Spandau was
a fortress
- DWM Lugers were
checked by Spandau inspectors
- Lugers whose toggle was struck with a Spandau crowned
logo
- The so-called "production" is estimated at
about 200 pistols
- If all of these pieces are not fakes ...
The Vickers Lugers
-
Vickers & Co.which
was founded at Sheffield (England) in 1823
- An activity,
oriented toward war battleship building
- Vickers was to handle a Dutch contract for Luger pistols
- These Lugers were proofed under English law
- The English firearms regulation
The Simson Lugers
-
The firm SIMSON &
Co, Waffenfabrik , Suhl, Thuringia
- Simson acquired the
ERFURT arsenal machinery
- The rework of the pistols still available in remaining inventories
- Simson Lugers were very similar to ERFURT's
- The Simson markings
- A total Luger production estimated at around 25,000 pistols
- The "Simson & Co" marking replaced by a single "S"
- In 1934, the firm was dismantled by the Nazis
Krieghoff Lugers -
Historic details
-
In 1886, Ludwig Krieghoff founded a
sporting guns factory
- Ludwig had two sons named Ludwig Jr. and Heinrich
- The "HEINRICH KRIEGHOFF WAFFENFABRIK"
- Among its military oriented projects was a
semi-automatic rifle
- The H. Krieghoff company commercialized DWM Lugers
- The rear face of the frame struck "KRIEGHOFF SUHL"
- An order of 10,000 Luger pistols for
the "Luftwaffe"
- Luger production means were tooled by the firm's
engineers
- Only
Krieghoff Lugers bear "Luftwaffe" acceptance markings
- A small quantity of Lugers sold on the commercial market
- Today the firm KRIEGHOFF is based at ULM
Krieghoff Lugers -
Military production
-
It only represents a total of some 13,825 pieces
- The "G" and "S"
chamber codes
- Military production figures detailed by serial ranges
- The original contract of 10,000 pieces
- The 1940 production
- The complementary 1940 - 1944 production
- The last delivery of 1944 - 45
Krieghoff Lugers -
Commercial production
-
A capital
"P" prefix letter along with the serial number
- Commercial production
figures detailed by serial ranges
- Production figures detailed by serial ranges
- The first group, from P1 to P999
- The second group includes some fifty pistols
- The last group begins with serial number P1060 until P1280
- When the Krieghoff's plant was "liberated" by the US troops
- The Krieghoff made Lugers are easily identified
- A "fzs" code was given to Krieghoff
Krieghoff Military Production
Markings
- The inspectors were accredited by the
"Luftwaffe"
- The inspection process covered two stages
- The problem of incorrect headspace
- A four or five pointed star rejection mark
- Aside from the "Luftwaffe" acceptance markings
- The still mysterious "Kü" Lugers
- The LA or ZA or LZA marking
Mauser - Historic details
- The Mauser legacy began in the modest circumstances
- The brothers, Paul and Wilhelm Mauser
- Their rifle officially adopted as the "Infanteriegewehr Modell 1871"
- The Mauser brothers founded their first factory, in 1872
- Around 1875, the Mauser company began to develop a revolver
- The semi-automatic pistol had appeared on the scene
- The pistol was called the "C96"
- The 1907-1914 era : A growing interest for small caliber pistols
- On May 30, 1922, the company's name was changed
- In 1932, a new model, sometimes called the "712", was launched
- In 1937, a new model appeared : The Hsc
Mauser Lugers - Commercial
production
- During the years 1930 through 1934
- The serial suffix letters : "s","
t" and "u"
- An order by the firm A. F. Stoeger, of New York
- Stoeger sole agent for DWM's after Hans Tauscher had left
- The Jewish firm "ELECTRIC COMPANY OF ISRAEL"
- The major part of the production delivered to German Police
- Dates codes like "K"(1934), "G" (1935)
- Commercial production figures by serial ranges and customers
Mauser Lugers - Commercial Foreign
Contracts
- The Portuguese Lugers
- The Latvian Lugers
- The Dutch Lugers
- The Siamese Lugers
- The Swedish Lugers
- The Turkish Lugers
- The Persian Lugers
- Commercial Lugers 1934/06
Mauser Military Lugers
- Military production figures by serial ranges and markings
- The Lugers S/42 (K)
- The Lugers S/42 (G)
- The Lugers S/42 (1936 - 1939)
- The Lugers 42 (1939-1940)
- The last variations "byf" 41 and 42
The Last Mauser Lugers
- The last -1942- Mauser Luger
- The Luger "byf / 42" serial nummer 3061n
- An entwined "RW" marking
- Recent Mauser production
Current Lugers prices and
Bibliography
- B&B Auction - August 1993
- Many specific books
Ebook screen shots
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