My Steyr-Mannlicher M95

The M95/34s would be former long rifles that were modified to carbine length. You can tell them apart from normal carbines and stutzens as they still have their tall ladder rear sight.
 
These M95/30s with the S on the barrel were made by the Austrians starting in...you guessed it 1930. Between 1938 to 1940 the Germans shipped them to the Bulgarians to help build up their army. In the early 1990s there was a ton of surplus ammo, cheap, (I think $2.50/10rnds at Lebarons) with the German eagle stamps on the bottom of the casing. Obviously they were making ammo for the Bulgarians.

The Bulgarians did not take part in the invasions of Yugoslavia and Russia like some of the other German allies (Hungary, Romania). These rifles got limited use, and likely only against the Germans once Bulgaria joined the Allies in late 1944. How is that for irony!

It was a fun shooter for a $100 rifle with a big 8mm round.

Once the plentiful cheap German ammo dried up so did a lot of interest.
 
Correct, made after the Anschluss in 1938. Seems much of the stuff is dated August (VIII) 1938. Very well made in my opinion.

I tried 5 rounds in my rifle and she kicked hard, I can only imagine what the lighter carbine would feel like.

Austria made the ammo not Germany although the eagle and swastika are present.Harold
 
There was also pre-Anschluss ammo around for a while, seemed to have come in at the same time as the stuff with the chickens.

Previous to that, there was a whack of actual Bulgarian-made ammo in this calibre, made at Sofia Arsenal and headstamped BPhi with the date. I have a bag of it here, mostly 1940 - 1944 stuff.

CLIPS are something else and I have managed to scavenge several of the Nazi ones, a couple of pre-Anschluss Austrian, a couple I believe from the Honved and a single example with the old Imperial double-eagle. The Kaiser would approve, I am sure!

NICE part is that the same Clip also works in my 1917 Police Carbine, which is still in 8x50R.

Ammo is easy to make: for the 8x56 you can just open-out 7.62x54R and it's close enough, for the original round, just open out and trim. Works.
 
Flip up the sight, move the adjustment slide up and look at the bottom of the sight, it is set up for 300m. It works great on my Stutzen.
 
Morc,

Another great CGN member helped me out with a different issue, completely out of the blue.
I told him I would "Pay it forward"
PM me your address and I'll send you 2 clips.

I was going to do the same thing ! Congrats on the great move to help somebody. I wish more people would think like that.
 
Text Book of Small Arms - 1909 gives Austrian Paces as equal to 29.53 inches, which is exactly .75 of a metre.

This is about midway between OUR standard marching pace (30 inches or 2-1/2 feet) and the Imperial Russian Arshin.

Hope this helps.
 
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