mauser1908
Senior Member
Hi Everyone,
I picked this one up a few weeks ago. 1918 dated items are a primary focus of mine, so I couldn’t resist when this one came up for sale for a second time.
As for the rifle, imperial 1918 WMOs are one of the harder 1918 dates to find. While they were the largest maker in 1918 by a long shot, surviving imperial examples are almost non existent. Most were earmarked for the Ottoman contract, the units that weren’t delivered were either sold or destroyed during the panic prior to IAMCC inspections. This gun is all matching less the screws, the metal is gorgeous but the stock has been blasted. Note the neat Spandau manufactured trigger guard, definitely a shuffled part during their reorganization that took place in 1917. All in all, I’m very pleased. Beggars can’t be choosers, enjoy.
Receiver SN: 5747e c/G, c/E, c/E
Barrel SN: 5747e B.S. 104 (Bergische Stahl-Industrie-Gesellschaft) c/K, c/K, c/K
Rear sight SN: 47
Sight Slider SN: 47
Ejector box SN: 47
Trigger Sear SN: 47
Front barrel band SN: 47
Rear barrel band SN: 47
Trigger guard SN: 5747
Trigger guard screws SN: unnumbered
Floor Plate SN: 47
Follower SN: 47
Stock SN: 5747
Handguard SN: Unnumbered, Mauser (factory error) C/K acceptance, correct for late 1917-18.
Buttplate SN: 5747e
Bayonet lug SN: 47
Bolt SN: 5747e
Extractor SN: 47
Firing Pin SN: 47
Bolt Sleeve SN: 47
Saftey SN: 47
Cocking Peice SN: 47















I picked this one up a few weeks ago. 1918 dated items are a primary focus of mine, so I couldn’t resist when this one came up for sale for a second time.
As for the rifle, imperial 1918 WMOs are one of the harder 1918 dates to find. While they were the largest maker in 1918 by a long shot, surviving imperial examples are almost non existent. Most were earmarked for the Ottoman contract, the units that weren’t delivered were either sold or destroyed during the panic prior to IAMCC inspections. This gun is all matching less the screws, the metal is gorgeous but the stock has been blasted. Note the neat Spandau manufactured trigger guard, definitely a shuffled part during their reorganization that took place in 1917. All in all, I’m very pleased. Beggars can’t be choosers, enjoy.
Receiver SN: 5747e c/G, c/E, c/E
Barrel SN: 5747e B.S. 104 (Bergische Stahl-Industrie-Gesellschaft) c/K, c/K, c/K
Rear sight SN: 47
Sight Slider SN: 47
Ejector box SN: 47
Trigger Sear SN: 47
Front barrel band SN: 47
Rear barrel band SN: 47
Trigger guard SN: 5747
Trigger guard screws SN: unnumbered
Floor Plate SN: 47
Follower SN: 47
Stock SN: 5747
Handguard SN: Unnumbered, Mauser (factory error) C/K acceptance, correct for late 1917-18.
Buttplate SN: 5747e
Bayonet lug SN: 47
Bolt SN: 5747e
Extractor SN: 47
Firing Pin SN: 47
Bolt Sleeve SN: 47
Saftey SN: 47
Cocking Peice SN: 47















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