I should have known this but it came as a surprise to me.
Star Model B pistols were widely used by the Axis nations, especially Germany during WWII. Spain of course supplied them. They were for rear echelon troops and civilians such as policemen etc.
The Soviets of course captured thousands of them and put them through their famous refurbishment process. The best way to tell if these pistols went from Spain to Germany and later to the Soviet refurb depots is the plum coloring on the harder parts which we see on all other RCs.
I purchased a Star Model B Super last weekend and picked it up today. it was make post war in 1973. Lovely pistol that came with two spare mags. Oddly this pistol has plum colored parts such as the extractor and take down lever/pin.
Even though the Model B Super outwardly resemble the 1911 that's where it ends for the most part. Yes, it still incorporates some of the JMB features but because of operational issues some changes were made to improve the system. The barrel link is not hinged but similar to the Sig and S&W M39 and the trigger rotates on a pin instead of pulling straight back etc. No grip safety either and a five in barrel. The pistol is slimmer than the 1911.
The pistol is polished nicely and in excellent condition inside and out. Looking forward to shooting it. It is obviously one of the Tradex imports and I would say from the faint markings its been refurbed.
The Model B Super pistols being offered by Tradex likely aren't milsurp although they may be police surplus. Nothing on them to indicate where they were used or who they were issued to.
The Model B pistols were unique in that they weren't given any Axis or German acceptance stamps or property marks until the Soviets got ahold of them.
It makes sense for the Axis nations to have utilized these pistols but we certainly haven't heard much about them. In fact there are those out there that turn their noses up at them. The B model pistols were all made during WWII for export to the Axis nations. Thousands of them were issued to Axis troops/police etc. All those milsurps with Axis provenance under our noses all this time and only the most knowledgeable collectors actually knowing anything about them.
Star Model B pistols were widely used by the Axis nations, especially Germany during WWII. Spain of course supplied them. They were for rear echelon troops and civilians such as policemen etc.
The Soviets of course captured thousands of them and put them through their famous refurbishment process. The best way to tell if these pistols went from Spain to Germany and later to the Soviet refurb depots is the plum coloring on the harder parts which we see on all other RCs.
I purchased a Star Model B Super last weekend and picked it up today. it was make post war in 1973. Lovely pistol that came with two spare mags. Oddly this pistol has plum colored parts such as the extractor and take down lever/pin.
Even though the Model B Super outwardly resemble the 1911 that's where it ends for the most part. Yes, it still incorporates some of the JMB features but because of operational issues some changes were made to improve the system. The barrel link is not hinged but similar to the Sig and S&W M39 and the trigger rotates on a pin instead of pulling straight back etc. No grip safety either and a five in barrel. The pistol is slimmer than the 1911.
The pistol is polished nicely and in excellent condition inside and out. Looking forward to shooting it. It is obviously one of the Tradex imports and I would say from the faint markings its been refurbed.
The Model B Super pistols being offered by Tradex likely aren't milsurp although they may be police surplus. Nothing on them to indicate where they were used or who they were issued to.
The Model B pistols were unique in that they weren't given any Axis or German acceptance stamps or property marks until the Soviets got ahold of them.
It makes sense for the Axis nations to have utilized these pistols but we certainly haven't heard much about them. In fact there are those out there that turn their noses up at them. The B model pistols were all made during WWII for export to the Axis nations. Thousands of them were issued to Axis troops/police etc. All those milsurps with Axis provenance under our noses all this time and only the most knowledgeable collectors actually knowing anything about them.