1877 Spandau M71 IG w/ WWI Service

chrisftk

Moderator²
Staff member
Hi All,

Here is another one-- this is a nice matching Spandau M71 IG. This is in great condition by M71 standards with a crisp stock and a good bit of finish left on a barrel. The bands are, as usual, pretty worn, but I believe that is a function of the fragility of the finish used on them. This one does not have a unit mark and likely was pulled from a depot into rear line service during WWI. SN is 2714 with a manufacture date of 1877. There are not a lot of reported Spandaus out there (or of non-Amberg M71s in general)

A couple of cool features that give pretty conclusive WWI provenance--

1) A dufflecut behind the rear band-- not often seen on these.
2) Wartime steel triggerguard-- as outlined in Storz, brass was needed for shell casings and the brass guards removed from a number of M71 rifles to be melted down. They were replaced by a steel guard that was painted (not blued) with a black enamel. The triggerguard screws are m/m, which leads me to believe the replacement process was done as an expedient and effort was not made to match or renumber screws. My Erfurt M71 also has a steel guard and m/m screws, so that's at least another data point for the practice.

All and all a cool example that illustrates some neat WWI traits.

Thanks for looking-
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Chris this is probably my favorite M1871 of yours. I am happy you got it. That stock looks great for its age. Like I said before. I actually didn't even notice the steel triggerguard on the GB photos.
 
Very nice! Pardon my ignorance, but tell me about the date marking, clearly two fonts, did they build batches of receivers dated 18__and then fill in the year at assembly? Seems unlikely.
 
Very nice! Pardon my ignorance, but tell me about the date marking, clearly two fonts, did they build batches of receivers dated 18__and then fill in the year at assembly? Seems unlikely.
Hi Charles-- that's a great observation and I think they actually did stamp the last 2 digits later... See my Spandau Kar71 as another example. Maybe something the Prussian arsenals did? I'll check my Erfurt and Danzig M71 rifles later to see.
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Interesting. I wonder if there are ways to identify batches by other markings (serial numbers or proofs?) before the final date numbers were applied.
 
Good observation on the date! These are pretty elusive, outside of Steyr and Amberg these are pretty rare... I think I had this one in the trends but added a few details, the cypher and the link to this thread.
 
Good observation on the date! These are pretty elusive, outside of Steyr and Amberg these are pretty rare... I think I had this one in the trends but added a few details, the cypher and the link to this thread.
Thanks Paul- I'm assuming that the scarcity of these is tied to the fact that many were dumped on the surplus market once repeaters became available. Beyond the scarcity, most I see are pretty rough with little finish.

There have been some nice ones popping up of late though. This completed the arsenal set for me. I also nailed down Mauser, Steyr and NAA. My stretch goal is to get the full set like I did with carbines. I need the Sommerda and Suhl Consortium to make that happen (not holding my breath)
 
I too think more of these than the 71/84's, especially when speaking of Spandau; the 71's just have so much character and in Spandau's case I really dislike the serialing method, - for instance compared to Danzig in the same modell, you can get a grasp of production patterns and numbers made per year, a progression of their involvement.

Anyway, there is a lot more challenges to 71 production (interpretations) than 71/84 and I like the character the 71's carry, they were used and have some history, not sure the same is true of most 71/84's one encounters.
 
I too think more of these than the 71/84's, especially when speaking of Spandau; the 71's just have so much character and in Spandau's case I really dislike the serialing method, - for instance compared to Danzig in the same modell, you can get a grasp of production patterns and numbers made per year, a progression of their involvement.

Anyway, there is a lot more challenges to 71 production (interpretations) than 71/84 and I like the character the 71's carry, they were used and have some history, not sure the same is true of most 71/84's one encounters.
I agree 100% on the Spandau serialization method. Doing blocks of 10,000 and not giving any sort of indication on roll over sequence just seems odd to me and atypical of what you'd expect.
 
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