Mannlicher M95

MiG25

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
69   0   0
Location
B.C.
i really like the mannlicher M95, i think it is a very under-rated rifle with lots of history attached to it.

this particular rifle was manufacted at steyr but was proofed in budapest in 1916 so i assume it was issued to the hungarian army. post WWI it was rebuilt/rechambered and marked with the "S" in 1931 with what i believe is a new stock. it has a wide middle band with a wide loop welded on the side. the bolt is stamped with the SN which i gather represents bulgarian service.

P1060328.jpg


the bayonet in the photo is czech marked and the ammo was manufactured in germany in 1938.
 
I agree, another under rated rifle. It is a shame the bullet diameter is oddball. Yours is a beauty too.

I don't know why the Austrians didn't convert their M95s to take the 8x57mm in the 1930s, that would be have been very useful and the M95s would have been viewed very differently today.
 
Yup, pretty cool and has an extensive service history, but relatively unknown, at least in Canada. I like the tiger striping on your stock, plus you have the bayonet scabbard which you don't see too many of....the Germans converted a number of these rifles to 8mm Mauser during the war; they are are designated as "M95M"'s and have a provision for a stripper clip as opposed to the enbloc system.
 
My understanding of the M95Ms is that they were converted by the Yugoslavians in the 1930s to 8mm Mauser from rifles and carbines surrendered by Austria-Hungary after WW1 and were made to closely resemble the Model 1924 Mauser then in service.

Or am I wrong ?

I think the German converted ones are named differently, I can't recall what it is at the moment though.
 
My understanding of the M95Ms is that they were converted by the Yugoslavians in the 1930s to 8mm Mauser from rifles and carbines surrendered by Austria-Hungary after WW1 and were made to closely resemble the Model 1924 Mauser then in service.

Or am I wrong ?

No,you are not wrong.According to"Serbian and Yugoslav Mausers" book that was exactly the case.

Yugoslavia had all the tooling and machinery to produce rifles and machine guns in 8x57.I don't think they did many purchases of arms or ammunition from Austria or Hungary before 1940 as well but I can be wrong.

Austria (as well as Hungary)also had all the tooling and great expertise in producing M95 and Schwarzlose MG in 8x50R and later 8x56R.Why the never adopted 8x57 instead of 8x56R?IMHO shortage of funds-simple as that.
 
Let`s remember that there didn`t have to be a heck of a lot of "surrendering" going on, either. Those rifles were ALL THROUGH Southern Europe. Remember, the two Balkan Wars PLUS the Great War had spread things around nicely.

The old Habsburg Empire which died at the peace talks in 1919 comprised all of modern Austria, Hungary, Bosnia and Herzegovina, a piece of Romania, some of Ukraine, part of Poland, much of Bohemia dnd Moravia (modern Czech and Slovak Republics), large areas of the former Yugoslavia, a piece of Italy and Lord-only-knows-what-else. It was BIG and had twin capitals, Vienna and Budapest. The German Reich and the Kingdom of Bulgaria were its allies.

National entities regarded it as a point of honour to have their OWN weapons and their OWN ammunition. The conversion to 8x56R makes a lot of sense for a nation with a huge inventory of weapons and no longer the money to make new ones. The conversions could be done on older guns, cleaning up the chambers and leades and reboring the barrels to a cartridge which was based on their old one..... which had worked perfectly well.

To top that off, the manufacture of NEW military weapons was forbidden by the Versailles Treaties. Germany did build some Kar 98b rifles in the 1920s, but that was under the top-secret von Seeckt program. That is why my Kar98b has NO date and NO manufacturer`s markings: a completely-"black" rifle in every way.

They undertook the conversions beginning in 1930, at which time Adolf Hitler still was a beer-hall troublemaker with a Party which still had been illegal in much of Germany only a couple of years before. NOBODY, except for Adolf Hitler with his legendary fingerspitzengefuhl, expected the events of January 30, 1933....... much less what followed. Kar98k, for example, was finalised only in 1935, actual fullscale deliveries of the MG-34 followed only a couple of years later.

Besides, the League likely would have stepped on any attempt to co-ordinate the militaries of Austria, Hungary and Germany.... and the League still was a force of sorts in 1930-31. It only became a laughing-stock when it allowed The Duke to ravage Ethiopia.

Check my quote from Dr. Lightbody. You need a HUGE amount of background. I was fortunate indeed to have studied under him: he was THERE and he KNEW a lot of the people making the decisions.

Hope this helps.
.
 
so which of the users of these rifles stamped the SN on the bolt head, with a single gas hole (not bolt body or handle)?
 
Back
Top Bottom