@ TWOSTEAM:
Thanks for helping out, Janice! I have tried and tried, but Photobucket does NOT like my computer. It's just as if it were Magick, except that my Spell-check program doesn't even help!
As to the Lugers, guys, I bought my first one, the battered 1918, from a local RCMP Officer while I was still in high-school, so I have had it 50 years now. Took 10 minutes to register and I carried it home in my pocket. Paid $20 for it, which was most of a week's pay, then another $17.50 to replace the parts which were missing (it had been strippd). My Dad found out about it and blew his top completely, screamed at me, "This is your Mother said you could have this. She'd let you have a g*d-damned German MACHINE-GUN if you wanted one!" And he stomped out, but left the gun; Dad had a lot of respect for personal private property. About a month later, Dad did another inspection on my room and discovered a round black thing looking at him from about 27 inches off the floor. He picked it up as if it were a dead rat and said, "Allright, what's THIS?" and I had to answer honestly, "Uh, that's a German machine-gun, Dad." (It belonged to one of HIS friends, had been given to me to discover why it didn't want to work. Kinked mainspring housing on an MP-40 will do it every time.) Dad looked at the MP and asked, "How does it work?".... to which I replied, "Real good!" Couple of nights after that, he told me to bring him the Luger and show him how to strip it.... so I did. He asked why the trigger was so damned hard to pull (it was about 35 pounds) and I said that I didn't know and that gunsmiths didn't like working on them because they were too finely made. So Dad analysed how the trigger mech worked, got out his snips, tiny files, little bar of tin solder and a little piece of hard copper plate and got to work. I watched as he built up the hand on the bell-crank lever which actually pushes the Sear. Just once, almost under his breath, I heard him mutter something. It was "Christ, this thing's crude!" and right then was when I began understanding what being an Air Force INSTRUMENT MAKER was all about! He slapped the Luger back together and it works beautifully, proper 2-stage trigger pull and all, just like it was 1918 all over again. I have fired any number of rounds through it in the past 50 years and it always works fine..... and it still has that tiny copper plate on the bell-crank hand. Thanks, Dad!
The holster it lives in is marked inside as the property of Wilhelm Hartmann, who was a Captain in the Imperial German Army. Funny story there; I was going out with a girl named Hartmann at the time and she told me that her Grandpa was in an Army at one time, so I asked which one. She didn't know. And she didn't think her Grandfather had an accent - he just talked like her Grandpa. MY Grandfather didn't have an accent, either - but he talked exactly like half the County of Kent! Her "Grandpa Bill" had moved into a smaller apartment recently and had got rid of some of his old junk...... and I had bought his holster for 75 cents in a Vancouver second-hand shop! So my first Luger lives in Captain Hartmann's holster to this day.
The 1916 turned up at Sidney I. Robinson for $200, 18 or 19 years ago. I bought it and went through a month of Gummint BS before I could go back and pick it up (It's only a 600-klick round trip, you know!). When I picked it up, the counter guy said, "Just a minute; there's a holster for it and some ammo." So I waited and along came that gun's original holster, WITH a spare WWI mag AND a little cloth bag containing a mixture of Sten Gun rounds, black-ball MP-40 stuff...... and Fiocchi-made Model 38 rounds for the Beretta SMG, so we have an idea where it has been. Interesting thing is that, despite the brand-new condition, this gun is NOT matching. The entire upper has been changed as an assembly, and this was done when the gun was NEW. I have a whole Raisin Pie that says that this was done in the Army in 1916, when two good friends sat down and cleaned their guns together..... and traded uppers as a gesture of friendship. Sounds romantic? Yes. But gestures such as that, however romantic and silly to us today, would have made perfect sense in the Germany of the Kaiserzeit. So I have what is likely the PRETTIEST mismatch in existence! This is the one I took to the shoot here.... for anyone to try a Luger.
The 1938 was purchased at the closing-out auction of a Brandon gun shop. I live 3 houses from the RCMP station, so I thought that I could buy the thing and shoot a match with it in 3 weeks' time. Hah! Getting this one registered took FOUR YEARS AND EIGHT MONTHS and cost me more in storage than I paid for the damned gun! It is a mismatched Mauser, as anyone can see, and it has the crossed-Moisins stamping which indicates that it was captured and re-issued by the Russians. It has been shot a LOT; the rifling is very weak and it was fouled terribly. Every time it is cleaned, out comes another layer of fouling. Who knows? There MIGHT even be a half-decent bore in there! Time will tell.
The P-38 is a local Vet bring-back from the Second War.
Talk about war crimes all you like, but the one thing I will NOT forgive the Nazis for is taking the Luger out of production! The P-38 is very slick and very modern (this one is a 1944 V-block Mauser) and it works flawlessly.... but it does not have that indefinable ELEGANCE of Georg Luger's creation.
So that's my Lugers.
Enjoy!