Both the Luger and the Mauser pistols and carbines have such exquisite machining. The Luger's checkering is really impressive. It's kind of staggering to consider the level of craftsmanship in these guns.
Ah yes i love carrying a flamethrower That could explode any point on my back. Or a handgun that can over heat in my holster that will cause it to shoot mu leg with a cook off.
Oh my that thing is beautifully made and fitted.. And the finish looks like black glass.. I can't think of a more cool of a plinker for a day at the range considering one would actually want to shoot this piece regularly. I've shot a 7,65 caliber Luger used by my relative as a service pistol as a chief guard in a large areal prison. These things just fit so nicely in the hand and shoot like butter. And they are built like Swiss watches. Real eye candy of a gun if any. Thanks for the video!
Hello again. I am portuguese and our penultimate king (D. Carlos I) had one just like this, as well as some C-96. All of them are preserved in a museum, thank God. He was a good shooter, hunter, and artist, and science enthusiast. The armed forces also had Lugers on its both calibers. His son would be responsable for the 1st order to D.W.M. for the army: 4600 in .30 caliber. After October the 5th,1910 the republic would come, and they placed more orders. Most of portuguese Lugers are from D.W.M., but I know there were some from Mauser too. An awesome gun, no matter what version. 1000 Thanks for this video.
You must be using the post Carter consumer price index at the base of your inflation calculations. If you include the price of the items removed from the CPI by various White House administrations since then, a truer 2016 price for the pistol is about $1,400+. :)
My Dad & I were watching a movie and it showed a Luger. Dad said "They used to hate it when I'd go to the Seattle Police Department range, because that was so loud." I said I hadn't known he'd had a Luger, and Dad said, "Oh, yeah. I loved it. It had a long barrel, and a carrying case that doubled as a shoulder stock." I screamed......
My name is Cameron McCreary. I love these carbines. I made the custom rear stocks, grips, magazine bottoms and fore ends for John Martz Luger carbines. They were made like the originals and lots of fun to shoot and very accurate out to 200 meters. Enjoy!!!
I bought one these in the 90's from an estate sale. It is a matching number gun on the 22xxx range. If memory serves I paid $400.00 for it. It is a wonderful pistol, very accurate and it works well for small game.
Beautiful. It looks very finely made. It is interesting that a standard luger was going for very close to the same relative dollar as a VP9 or PPQ today. While we may be getting a better pistol today in terms of practical function today, I think they were getting a better value back then.
That is just beautiful. I miss the style of the older guns/buildings/etc. Guns may be better today, but they just don't have the aesthetics of the old stuff.
Its amazing to me how Ian(sp?) does so much research and knows so much about basically every gun he reviews, down to each individual screw and spring in the action of every gun... its very impressive. And on top of that, he somehow does that w/ multiple guns/videos a week. props to Gun Jesus.
It helps that about 80% of guns, if not more, all follow similar principles. Similar to how all car controls are laid out the same etc. People figured out what worked best.
There was a presentation custom cased Luger Carbine given to Hitler, that a G.I. picked up as a souvenir, and then was lost in time. I read about it when it was discovered in his attic by his family after his passing. There was an article in Guns & Ammo in the ‘70’s. It showed amazing craftsmanship. I myself found a .22 cal Stoeger Luger that looked much like this one, minus the buttstock. Shot true, but had to be manually loaded because the previous owner didn’t maintain it at all.
Weirdly enough this thing looks strangely futuristic to me. Obviously it's over a hundred years old, but imagine it being finished in a more modern materials.
Hi Ian, great review, as always. This is a beautiful piece and I wish that I could justify having such a work of industrial art. Since I had already done a regression of the Barrels-By-The-Inch database of the Federal 135 gr. Hydra Shok JHP Low Recoil in 9mm, I wanted to see what the benefit of the longer barrel might be. Yes, I know this uses a different cartidge, but I figure that this is close enough to give some insight. Luger P08 Luger Carbine Barrel 3.9 11.8 Energy 320 417 % of Max 75% 98% So, the carbine pretty much extracts all of the power of the cartridge in a light, compact, controllable, aimable, transportable, semi-automatic. Considering that the next step up would likely be a full-size repeating rifle, I can see the potential appeal. Of course, I may be biased in that I have a Beretta CX4 in 9mm which is in many respects quite similar and I just love it. Not as pretty or as cool as the Luger, but fun to shoot and a whole lot cheaper.
During the early 20th century through WW1, I know that Germany and Austria-Hungary made many stocks for, or rifles from, their service pistols. These include the Luger P08, Mauser C96, Steyr-Hahn, Frommer Stop, Mannlicher pistols, Bergmann pistols, and maybe a few more. However, was this concept really experimented with among other countries, aside from those two, during this specific time period? I never hear about anything like stocks being made for the M1911, Ruby, Nagant M1895, Colt 1903, or whatnot. . .
I remember my grandpa having one of these when I was young. I always wanted to have it for myself when I got older. Unfortunately, he passed away and my grandma sold it, along with all his other lugers/WWII pistols, to a dealer who gave her pennies on the dollar.
What a well built and well cared for carbine. The thing looks 5 years old, ha. If I thought I could afford it, I would purchase this one, even though it is not in 9mm. I am sure I can find a way to reload for it. My favorite stocked carbine of that general time is the detachable magazine Mauser. I think that lends itself well to being a carbine, and the detachable magazine almost makes it viable as a modern CQC carbine.
Great episode, I really wish more guns came like the Lugers and their ilk, they used to come with fitted cases for accessories and such. I also am very happy you included the trivia about Kaiser Wilhelm II having an affinity for these guns.
According to wikipedia, some carbines from the 1920's had barrels up to 24 inches. Ian needs to find one... I can only find an image of "only" 16 inches.
I would love one of these and I really like the ones that come with the interchangeable barrels so you can chose between the rifle and handgun so you can use it either way.
+Ben M This cartridge has put many people in the ground so it should do fine for deer. The problem is that people forget that not everything is shooting 30-06 so don't try and take a large buck at 700 yards. LOL
Yes, I would hunt with it. W-W and R-P both made the .30 Luger in hollow points up until about the 1950s. Would be a good hunting round. But mainly, I would just sit back in my easy chair and admire the beautiful Luger carbine. :-)
I bet Borchart wished he'd listened to the suggestions everyone gave him when the trials were taking place. Can you imagine being so close to creating one of the most iconic pistols ever made? What an egotistical tragedy. Oh well, at least Mr.Luger was there to save the day.👍😉
Came here trying to identify a rare sighting of these used by gangster (Dan Duryea) in the movie Ball of Fire 1941 with Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck.
If they'd developed it to be able to perhaps store the barrel in the stock and basically change from a pistol to rifle barrel without tools then it could have been marketed fairly well as perhaps an aircrew weapon,especially if the stock also provided extra cartridges alongside the rifle barrel. Of course today it would be hard to have something like that exist legally as a brand new gun
Thanks for a great video of an interesting, rare item in - pretty much - perfectly preserved condition. I predict it will realise a premium at auction.
I hate how attaching a stock on a pistol no longer makes it a pistol but into something less legal. I'm guessing it's because the same folks who said a barrel-shroud is illegal because it's "The thing that connects to the shoulder."
Не удалось пострелять с такого пистолета-карабина (в 1986г),патронов Не было 7,65×21. С "Артеллериста" много стрелял (9×19),да и из разных Р08,а вот п-карабина,увы. Спасибо за видио ! Вообще-то...,я фанат Люгера,первый раз пострелял в 1969г,у начальника топографо-геодезической партии был служебны Р08. Фронтовик с первых дней,имел 3 ордена Красной звезды,не считая медалей. С Уважением,Юрий.
I hope it is. Customizing guns for different use in Bad Company 2 and on was the greatest thing, would make all the sense if you could end up with a stocked Luger even if it wasn't this beautiful model.
Mamiya645 Don't forget about when you spawn in a tank or plane and get the C96 Carbine (A Mauser Broomhandle with a longer barrel like the Luger 1902), there's 9 or something different guns that are available in the full release
I'd love these. Its certainly underpowered as a rifle, but as a training weapon, small game weapon, or just general target shooting carbine its probably quite fun. If I'd been around in the early 1900s, I'd have given that to my kid as a first gun lol.
Perhaps one day you'll run across a Luger rifle m1906. That'd probably have to be your final video, because that is the crown jewel of unicorn guns(barring, except, the absolute very first firearm ever invented).
Hi m8 I wanted to ask with the nature of your videos and sometimes they cover things like war in general or natzi stuff were you hit by the recent youtube adverts bullshit. Obviously your videos are more hystorical than anything else but wanted to know. pretty gun by the way , nice condition esp the wood
I don't think he would have been since all his videos are in the genre education by the RUclips classification, it's a bot after all and there are plenty of legitimate documentaries about that stuff so I doubt it would take that into consideration.
Wait?? They are demonitizing you of all people? wtf man? I am sorry to hear that. You provide a historical channel that many love to watch. Including myself. Albiet RUclips is well within their business rights and I thoroughly agree with even the most bigoted having rights.. This does not mean I have to use RUclips.. RUclips is free to be fascists if they choose. I will be else were. And i hope to bring others with me. Checkout minds.com . It could end up a nice place away from the fantasy land of safe space for us:) Somewhere where peoples pussy does hurt so much, or at least when it does they douche it better.
I know this is a 2 year old video and I'm not sure if it has been brought up as I only scanned some of the comments. Theodore Roosevelt became President on Sept 14th, 1901 after McKinley was assassinated. So it very well might have been a presentation gun he was given, as he was an avid gun enthusiast.
OMG Ian I would love to have this in my own personal collection this carbine looks fantastic I can't get over how good it looks unfortunately I can't afford it I'm sure it will hit at least 5 grand
Can you do one on the 1952 Sears Roebuck bolt action 12 gauge by high standard? I have one in original condition all original parts:) Awesome shotgun, kicks like a mule;)
Something I would love to see you talk about is some of the weird Russian bullpups. Though sadly i doubt you'd run into one, thus get a chance to talk about them.
Most of them had grip safeties, but the German military opted to omit that feature on their version. That then went on to be by far the most-manufactured type, so today the assumption is that they did not have grip safeties.
With the marking it is allowed for commercial use, f.e. sport shooting. Without your allowed to use it, but not charge against Luger when you have a problem.
Honestly I've always been a fan of pistol carbines. Why would you need to create a pistol and an semiautomatic carbine? Just take a pistol, stretch it and presto, you have a carbine
This is the first video I've seen of a Luger with a grip safety. I'm a little disappointed you didn't look at that. On the other hand, that would probably have required disassembly.
It might be interesting to know the 9mm ammunition loads used by the Imperial Germany and the latter Nazi-era Germany. It was mentioned elsewhere in the internet that the so-called Nazi 9mm were much hotter than recent manufactured 9mm ammunition. This idea was thought because the standard SAAMI pressure 9mm seems so anemic to warrant the use of the butt stock on weapons like this Luger carbine.
Is this the one they developed a special overcooked cartridge for, to take advantage of the long barrel? ISTR that it made quite the difference when fired in this gun.
Dumb question no one can answer me on. According to nys law what dictates a rifle is as far as I can find is barrel length of 18 inch or more. So can I order a Luger pistol with a 18 inch barrel without a pistol permit?
Funny how things go "full circle". Look at all the pistol caliber carbines available now.
The 1860s Henry rifle technically was a PCC.
Ya but those are more to skirt around the SBR rules then anything else
@@theeggman1199 that kind of thing inspired firearms design back then too
What you mean about them all being considered sbr's now
@@theeggman1199 It's considered a rifle if it has a stock.
Both the Luger and the Mauser pistols and carbines have such exquisite machining. The Luger's checkering is really impressive. It's kind of staggering to consider the level of craftsmanship in these guns.
It really is beautiful
Nice little carabine, I just love the style of this period.
Yeah, exactly
Ah yes i love carrying a flamethrower
That could explode any point on my back.
Or a handgun that can over heat in my holster that will cause it to shoot mu leg with a cook off.
@@thetexan1011 which pistol?
@@adamhauskins6407 the early po8 lugers.
@@thetexan1011 ah thanks
those guns are such goddamn beatiful craftsmanship
Oh my that thing is beautifully made and fitted.. And the finish looks like black glass.. I can't think of a more cool of a plinker for a day at the range considering one would actually want to shoot this piece regularly. I've shot a 7,65 caliber Luger used by my relative as a service pistol as a chief guard in a large areal prison. These things just fit so nicely in the hand and shoot like butter. And they are built like Swiss watches. Real eye candy of a gun if any. Thanks for the video!
Hello again. I am portuguese and our penultimate king (D. Carlos I) had one just like this, as well as some C-96. All of them are preserved in a museum, thank God. He was a good shooter, hunter, and artist, and science enthusiast. The armed forces also had Lugers on its both calibers. His son would be responsable for the 1st order to D.W.M. for the army: 4600 in .30 caliber. After October the 5th,1910 the republic would come, and they placed more orders. Most of portuguese Lugers are from D.W.M., but I know there were some from Mauser too. An awesome gun, no matter what version. 1000 Thanks for this video.
25 USD for a P08.......
I wish I had a Time machine.
*Although TBH I could probably afford a P08 if I can afford a Time machine*
$25 USD IN 1904.
$750 USD in 2016.
You must be using the post Carter consumer price index at the base of your inflation calculations. If you include the price of the items removed from the CPI by various White House administrations since then, a truer 2016 price for the pistol is about $1,400+. :)
+Ken ibn Anak I was basing it on Ian's quests in the vid
His point still stands, they're now $2000 and up. Usually up. (stating the obvious, but oh well)
he would need some old money.
These Lugers must have seemed like 'ray guns' when they were introduced in the 1900s. Such beautiful firearms.
Less than 30 years from the introduction of the Colt Peacemaker. Definitely a ray gun.
agreed
The ray gun was based on a luger bud
OMG!!! that pistol looks like it was made yesterday! perfect shape! wow!!
My Dad & I were watching a movie and it showed a Luger. Dad said "They used to hate it when I'd go to the Seattle Police Department range, because that was so loud." I said I hadn't known he'd had a Luger, and Dad said, "Oh, yeah. I loved it. It had a long barrel, and a carrying case that doubled as a shoulder stock."
I screamed......
Incredibly clever and elegant design. You cannot go wrong with the Luger brand. I'm not surprised the estimated price is so high...
So high it never sold.
I'm really glad you can make these vids for the auction because it gives me access to the history even though I could never afford to bid!
Thanks! :D
My name is Cameron McCreary. I love these carbines. I made the custom rear stocks, grips, magazine bottoms and fore ends for John Martz Luger carbines. They were made like the originals and lots of fun to shoot and very accurate out to 200 meters. Enjoy!!!
Happy To know you. I have several of Johns Lugers. I am trying to find someone that makes walnut presentation cases for them
after you remove the stock, can you throw it at an enemy in a duel to "end him rightly"?
I prefer throwing loaded magazines at my enemies
I miss this meme
those dwm carbines are in my eyes one of the most beautiful guns ever made.
I bought one these in the 90's from an estate sale. It is a matching number gun on the 22xxx range. If memory serves I paid $400.00 for it. It is a wonderful pistol, very accurate and it works well for small game.
Beautiful. It looks very finely made. It is interesting that a standard luger was going for very close to the same relative dollar as a VP9 or PPQ today. While we may be getting a better pistol today in terms of practical function today, I think they were getting a better value back then.
That is just beautiful. I miss the style of the older guns/buildings/etc. Guns may be better today, but they just don't have the aesthetics of the old stuff.
The C96 might always be my favorite for how neat it is, and it's badass looks, but Lugers are damn sexy.
Something just straight sexy about this setup, has the elements of a pistol, rifle, and shotgun all in one package
Its amazing to me how Ian(sp?) does so much research and knows so much about basically every gun he reviews, down to each individual screw and spring in the action of every gun... its very impressive. And on top of that, he somehow does that w/ multiple guns/videos a week. props to Gun Jesus.
It helps that about 80% of guns, if not more, all follow similar principles. Similar to how all car controls are laid out the same etc. People figured out what worked best.
an industrial designer and a mechanical engineer made a beautiful design that worked, neat
There was a presentation custom cased Luger Carbine given to Hitler, that a G.I. picked up as a souvenir, and then was lost in time. I read about it when it was discovered in his attic by his family after his passing. There was an article in Guns & Ammo in the ‘70’s. It showed amazing craftsmanship. I myself found a .22 cal Stoeger Luger that looked much like this one, minus the buttstock. Shot true, but had to be manually loaded because the previous owner didn’t maintain it at all.
Weirdly enough this thing looks strangely futuristic to me. Obviously it's over a hundred years old, but imagine it being finished in a more modern materials.
You can order a Luger in stainless steel...looks incredible!
Looks straight out of Star Wars, doesn't it?
I realise it's just a simple button, but the way the stock connects at 07:00 looks strangely modern for something that's almost a hundred years old.
mainly because star wars used old german surplus broken guns for their blasters
Hi Ian, great review, as always. This is a beautiful piece and I wish that I could justify having such a work of industrial art. Since I had already done a regression of the Barrels-By-The-Inch database of the Federal 135 gr. Hydra Shok JHP Low Recoil in 9mm, I wanted to see what the benefit of the longer barrel might be. Yes, I know this uses a different cartidge, but I figure that this is close enough to give some insight.
Luger P08 Luger Carbine
Barrel 3.9 11.8
Energy 320 417
% of Max 75% 98%
So, the carbine pretty much extracts all of the power of the cartridge in a light, compact, controllable, aimable, transportable, semi-automatic. Considering that the next step up would likely be a full-size repeating rifle, I can see the potential appeal. Of course, I may be biased in that I have a Beretta CX4 in 9mm which is in many respects quite similar and I just love it. Not as pretty or as cool as the Luger, but fun to shoot and a whole lot cheaper.
I really appreciate these videos as a firearms enthusiast and historian. Good info on unusual firearms.
During the early 20th century through WW1, I know that Germany and Austria-Hungary made many stocks for, or rifles from, their service pistols. These include the Luger P08, Mauser C96, Steyr-Hahn, Frommer Stop, Mannlicher pistols, Bergmann pistols, and maybe a few more. However, was this concept really experimented with among other countries, aside from those two, during this specific time period? I never hear about anything like stocks being made for the M1911, Ruby, Nagant M1895, Colt 1903, or whatnot. . .
One of the most beautiful pistol carbines made. Need one, can't afford one, but need one.
That's one of the coolest looking gun I've ever seen ! (sorry but you can't be cooler than a C96)
I always thought the Borshardt 1893 looked cooler than the C96. But thats my opinion.
The Schnellfeuer variant of the C96.
There, I topped you.
+theWolvesbane Bergmann 1910
The Canadian Viking
I prefer the looks of the C96
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
+theWolvesbane And ya know it's a damn sexy gun so I respect you for that.
I remember my grandpa having one of these when I was young. I always wanted to have it for myself when I got older. Unfortunately, he passed away and my grandma sold it, along with all his other lugers/WWII pistols, to a dealer who gave her pennies on the dollar.
Damnn that is ashame should have been family heirlooms
Doo doo happens.
This was the poster on my wall. Some kids had Lamborginis. One of the most beautiful guns ever made.
Would love to see Karl or Ian run this in one of their in range matches.
What a well built and well cared for carbine. The thing looks 5 years old, ha. If I thought I could afford it, I would purchase this one, even though it is not in 9mm. I am sure I can find a way to reload for it.
My favorite stocked carbine of that general time is the detachable magazine Mauser. I think that lends itself well to being a carbine, and the detachable magazine almost makes it viable as a modern CQC carbine.
Great episode, I really wish more guns came like the Lugers and their ilk, they used to come with fitted cases for accessories and such. I also am very happy you included the trivia about Kaiser Wilhelm II having an affinity for these guns.
Beautiful piece of history!
Ian misses nothing. Thank you for yet another amazing expo.
what beautiful cabine rifle, very well made, the machining is second to none, the finish looks great for its age
I love all the P08 design so damn bad! your channel is awesome as well!
Your videos are so hypnotic. I can not watch your for weeks and then when i watch one i was all the recent videos. Keep up the great work
According to wikipedia, some carbines from the 1920's had barrels up to 24 inches. Ian needs to find one... I can only find an image of "only" 16 inches.
uwu
Wow, 24"!? What a waste of weight.
@@oktayyildirim2911 I would expect the bullet to lose a ton of energy.
I loved the anecdotes about Theodore Roosevelt and Wilhelm II
is there any documentation of Teddy Roosevelt bagging any game with his Luger carbine?
I'm totally not a gun person but I find your videos so interesting.
I would love one of these and I really like the ones that come with the interchangeable barrels so you can chose between the rifle and handgun so you can use it either way.
I would soooo hunt with this thing.
I didn't say "successfully"
I imagine a 9x19 carbine is pretty good for up to class 2 game. Considering the small size of the game the semi auto capability would be nice.
+Ben M This cartridge has put many people in the ground so it should do fine for deer. The problem is that people forget that not everything is shooting 30-06 so don't try and take a large buck at 700 yards. LOL
Why not successfully? It's more a matter of hunting for the right game...
The stock is the key to all of this.
Yes, I would hunt with it. W-W and R-P both made the .30 Luger in hollow points up until about the 1950s. Would be a good hunting round. But mainly, I would just sit back in my easy chair and admire the beautiful Luger carbine. :-)
I'm early, lemme think of a joke.
RUclips in it's current state
+lptomtom go home correcter
You mean Grammar Nazi?
dont say nazi youtube will shit down your throat
Nope, the US election. It ruins every last shred of believe in democracy...
The joke only got bigger.
I bet Borchart wished he'd listened to the suggestions everyone gave him when the trials were taking place.
Can you imagine being so close to creating one of the most iconic pistols ever made?
What an egotistical tragedy.
Oh well, at least Mr.Luger was there to save the day.👍😉
Came here trying to identify a rare sighting of these used by gangster (Dan Duryea) in the movie Ball of Fire 1941 with Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck.
That is one of the most beautiful weapons I've ever seen!
Just watched C&Rsenal's vids about these yesterday.... Great timing :)
If they'd developed it to be able to perhaps store the barrel in the stock and basically change from a pistol to rifle barrel without tools then it could have been marketed fairly well as perhaps an aircrew weapon,especially if the stock also provided extra cartridges alongside the rifle barrel.
Of course today it would be hard to have something like that exist legally as a brand new gun
Esta Luger, representa uma das jóias desta empresa alemã, em referência as armas de boa qualidade. Sou grande admirador...
Thanks for a great video of an interesting, rare item in - pretty much - perfectly preserved condition. I predict it will realise a premium at auction.
I hate how attaching a stock on a pistol no longer makes it a pistol but into something less legal.
I'm guessing it's because the same folks who said a barrel-shroud is illegal because it's "The thing that connects to the shoulder."
Не удалось пострелять с такого пистолета-карабина (в 1986г),патронов Не было 7,65×21. С "Артеллериста" много стрелял (9×19),да и из разных Р08,а вот п-карабина,увы.
Спасибо за видио ! Вообще-то...,я фанат Люгера,первый раз пострелял в 1969г,у начальника топографо-геодезической партии был служебны Р08. Фронтовик с первых дней,имел 3 ордена Красной звезды,не считая медалей.
С Уважением,Юрий.
Man, these are nice looking guns !
Those 1902 lugers are the best looking one's by far
I have been watching your videos for a while now Ian, and I thought it was funny that a lot of the guns I've seen you cover are now in Battlefield 1.
Forgotten Weapons now is just "Hmm... Bet that gun's gonna be in BF1"
I hope it is. Customizing guns for different use in Bad Company 2 and on was the greatest thing, would make all the sense if you could end up with a stocked Luger even if it wasn't this beautiful model.
Mamiya645 Don't forget about when you spawn in a tank or plane and get the C96 Carbine (A Mauser Broomhandle with a longer barrel like the Luger 1902), there's 9 or something different guns that are available in the full release
whats up with these chinese cartoons in people profile pics
Oh shoot.. I need my PC to stop greyscreening so I can get playing games again.
Roberto Shrimp it's actually vietnamese spongebob
Incredible piece of history.
I'd love these.
Its certainly underpowered as a rifle, but as a training weapon, small game weapon, or just general target shooting carbine its probably quite fun. If I'd been around in the early 1900s, I'd have given that to my kid as a first gun lol.
Because it's not a rifle. And at typicals ranges i.e. less than 300 metres, 9mm is perfectly effective.
Perhaps one day you'll run across a Luger rifle m1906. That'd probably have to be your final video, because that is the crown jewel of unicorn guns(barring, except, the absolute very first firearm ever invented).
Considering the current trend of pistol-caliber carbines, stuff like this is only around 110 years early.
Gorgeous even if not super useful. I can only hope to have one someday.
Hi m8 I wanted to ask with the nature of your videos and sometimes they cover things like war in general or natzi stuff were you hit by the recent youtube adverts bullshit.
Obviously your videos are more hystorical than anything else but wanted to know. pretty gun by the way , nice condition esp the wood
I don't think he would have been since all his videos are in the genre education by the RUclips classification, it's a bot after all and there are plenty of legitimate documentaries about that stuff so I doubt it would take that into consideration.
Yes, I have been dealing with RUclips's new demonetization stuff.
He can't show the Nazi flag.
Wait?? They are demonitizing you of all people? wtf man? I am sorry to hear that. You provide a historical channel that many love to watch. Including myself.
Albiet RUclips is well within their business rights and I thoroughly agree with even the most bigoted having rights.. This does not mean I have to use RUclips.. RUclips is free to be fascists if they choose. I will be else were. And i hope to bring others with me. Checkout minds.com . It could end up a nice place away from the fantasy land of safe space for us:) Somewhere where peoples pussy does hurt so much, or at least when it does they douche it better.
If you want to support gun channels, including mine, the best thing you can do is watch on Full30.com instead of RUclips.
Beautifully made.
That 7.62 Luger is a great small game round
I know this is a 2 year old video and I'm not sure if it has been brought up as I only scanned some of the comments. Theodore Roosevelt became President on Sept 14th, 1901 after McKinley was assassinated. So it very well might have been a presentation gun he was given, as he was an avid gun enthusiast.
Always thought these were beautiful,definitely one of my win the lottery class dreams
Looks so well made.
be nice to see a artillery version luger they look alot like this one
OMG Ian I would love to have this in my own personal collection this carbine looks fantastic I can't get over how good it looks unfortunately I can't afford it I'm sure it will hit at least 5 grand
5 grand will get you a normal LP08 (artillery). $18,400 was the realized price.
Can you do one on the 1952 Sears Roebuck bolt action 12 gauge by high standard? I have one in original condition all original parts:) Awesome shotgun, kicks like a mule;)
How could that beautiful gun fail to sell
Aaron's Gaming Show Cost, market didn’t fit it, etc.
Something I would love to see you talk about is some of the weird Russian bullpups. Though sadly i doubt you'd run into one, thus get a chance to talk about them.
yeah that would be cool
xxBEASTITxx I would as well.
Is that metal tab on the back of the grip a grip safety or just a modification to get a better grip with the stock?
That's a grip safety.
Thanks, I didn't know they put those on Lugers.
Most of them had grip safeties, but the German military opted to omit that feature on their version. That then went on to be by far the most-manufactured type, so today the assumption is that they did not have grip safeties.
Interesting, thanks so much. Great videos in general.
With the marking it is allowed for commercial use, f.e. sport shooting. Without your allowed to use it, but not charge against Luger when you have a problem.
Beautiful gun in beautiful condition.
Honestly I've always been a fan of pistol carbines. Why would you need to create a pistol and an semiautomatic carbine? Just take a pistol, stretch it and presto, you have a carbine
That's a pretty sweet looking luger.
This is the first video I've seen of a Luger with a grip safety. I'm a little disappointed you didn't look at that. On the other hand, that would probably have required disassembly.
I thought all Lugers had grip safeties? At least the German and Swiss Lugers do
Beautiful. Simply beautiful.
Leave it up to gun Jesus when bfv releases a new weapon.
I wonder what Luger and the other early PCC makers would think of modern PCC’s.
Looks like a well made, quality piece
This must have been really handy inside 200 meters or so .30 Luger being flat shooting for a pistol cartridge.
Now that is a good looking gun.
That thing is a work of art.
It might be interesting to know the 9mm ammunition loads used by the Imperial Germany and the latter Nazi-era Germany. It was mentioned elsewhere in the internet that the so-called Nazi 9mm were much hotter than recent manufactured 9mm ammunition. This idea was thought because the standard SAAMI pressure 9mm seems so anemic to warrant the use of the butt stock on weapons like this Luger carbine.
I can’t believe this didn’t sell at auction
Kinda surprised that these weren't bought up a good amount in ww1 for military use
The separate stock would be one reason. Another is cost. Lugers were expensive, even back then.
Is this the one they developed a special overcooked cartridge for, to take advantage of the long barrel? ISTR that it made quite the difference when fired in this gun.
No, this uses standard 9x19.
Only 7.65x21 caliber used in this gun? In carbine configuration?
Beautiful Pistol Carbine!
Dumb question no one can answer me on. According to nys law what dictates a rifle is as far as I can find is barrel length of 18 inch or more. So can I order a Luger pistol with a 18 inch barrel without a pistol permit?
Might include overall length too and a stipulation for a stock
I'm wondering what the sight picture really is like... I wish we could legally get this one in Europe =s
That is extraordinarily beautiful
My grandfather bought a luger with a stock holster back from WW2. I wonder where it is now.
Work of art.
I think this gun was in the movie Ball of Fire starring Gary Cooper and Barbra Stanwyck.