Honestly I question a lot of information in his books, he doesn’t present as a expert on the subject matter (I have both his books on Gewehrs and Mannlichers). He seems like someone tasked to write a basic book on the topics as opposed to a dedicated collector who has deep knowledge on them. I have found some inaccuracies in there, my favourite being the improperly loaded M95 mannlicher clip, which is pretty difficult to do.Looking what they cost now I should have kept my copy of scarlatta’s book.
That has to be the deepest finger cut out I have ever seen on a 88/05. Wonder if it was a Monday/Friday done job or maybe the apprentice.A Turkish 1888/05. LOEWE BERLIN 1891 A serial bonanza; 3 serials. The checkering is a nice touch. Plus some vintage pills.
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Assuming they weren't drunk or high.That has to be the deepest finger cut out I have ever seen on a 88/05. Wonder if it was a Monday/Friday done job or maybe the apprentice.
Pretty sure that thumb cut irks Turkish, not German. You see them on the 88/05/35 guns. Maybe they reused one of those receivers to repair an older 88/05?Assuming they weren't drunk or high.
And made good money doing itPs: agree about scarlatta’s books. He seems to have compiled info from Internet forums, repeating unfounded info around Gew88 bore dimensions, for example.
Honestly I question a lot of information in his books, he doesn’t present as a expert on the subject matter (I have both his books on Gewehrs and Mannlichers). He seems like someone tasked to write a basic book on the topics as opposed to a dedicated collector who has deep knowledge on them. I have found some inaccuracies in there, my favourite being the improperly loaded M95 mannlicher clip, which is pretty difficult to do.
That has to be the deepest finger cut out I have ever seen on a 88/05. Wonder if it was a Monday/Friday done job or maybe the apprentice.
Yes, initially they were used by reserve units in Germany which did see front line service. Then as time progressed they were eventually fully replaced with Gewehr 98s. The rifles were then shipped in most cases to the Ottoman Empire or in smaller numbers Austria-Hungary for further service.Please pardon my ignorance on this matter:
Were the Gew88 used in WW 1? Or had they been replaced by a newer model by then?
Thanks.
Technically Gew 91Kar 88 and Kar 91 = totally OK!!