Warrior1354
ax - hole
Jeff your collection never ceases to amaze me.
These are very neat guns, and I would recommend Kern’s book to anyone who is seriously interested in them. I can’t say that I’ve ever seen a mismatched one here in the states. I’ve heard of one that was missing it’s bolt, and later heard that one had been located, but it’s still unusual.
Despite a million sources saying so, I have very serious doubts that 15,000 were made. Ive not seen one with a serial number over 10,000 (“a” block guns) and yet we are to believe that they were made and that every one of the subsequent 5,000 were destroyed? Not likely. I’ve read of A block guns, and would love to be proven wrong. Where are they?
Kerns numbers:
68a
371a
1106a
1278a
4117a
6474a
A 3,000 gap followed by a 2,300 gap. So, absent one gun, there is realistically a 5,300 gun gap, provided that these serial numbers are all accurately reported.
Kern did a lot of research through museum collections, so I don’t have any concerns with his scholarship there.
The idea that early v late survival is different is the reverse of what I would expect to be the case. The allies took mountains of war materials back, the seeming tens of thousands of Maxims in the US for example, and those weapons seem to show higher rates of survival amongst newer guns. I’ve seen no record of 1918s being destroyed en masse, like we have for airplanes and helmets and whatever else. Surely there would be photos of 6,000 of these guns being chopped up.
I think the most likely option is that a large number of actions were made, but never built into guns. If they weren’t serial numbered until completion, then we wouldn’t have a clean run of numbers. That doesn’t explain why the recorded numbers are so random; but it’s an option.
It wouldn't make sense for Kern to be documenting serial numbers of actions that were built into gauges for testing either....
just thinking aloud.
The guns he recorded seem to have been complete guns, not actions. I’d be curious to see the barrel markings on these late guns.
Yeah, I was watching that one too but the rebarrel, cleaned metal and reblued parts made me a bit apprehensive. I think it was a good price for what it was though.FYI there was a 1918 T Gewehr, lot 203, in the last Amoskeag auction, it had a .50 caliber barrel mounted but included the original barrel. Don’t know the letter suffix. Went well below estimate.
Now to complete your ensemble you need one of these.
One major reason some were rebarreled was that it originally was classified under "destructive devices" due to its caliber greater than .50. They were later specifically excluded from the NFA list due to their collectibility and the scarcity of ammo. They are now no different than any other C&R bolt action.I found this thread particularly educational,
so I dived deeper, the round is very interesting and its similarity to .50 cal mg ammo,
thought I saw few shops in the EU had demilled/inert 13mm rounds. Wonder what the base difference and neck /shoulder compared to a .50 cal round, the throat would have to be opened a bit.
must be significant difference as they rebarreled one to .50cal or they rebarreled it because .50 cal a few years back was cheap.!!!!!!!!
great thread