Carbines. Just Carbines.

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In response to Majspud's wake up call, it's time to get some activity around here!

So, pics of your Carbines please! No long guns allowed. [wink]

I'll start with an unobtainium Soviet M38 in the extremely rare first pattern stock. Non-import marked, first year, and Finn captured to ice the cake.

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39_M38_003.JPG

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/me Drools.

Any NES'ers have Swedish Mauser Carbines to share? I lust after them something awful.

Sure!

1914 Carl Gustafs Stadsgevärsfaktori m/94-14, all matching




original m/14 bayo bayo


its original fodder


and a 1916 Carl Gustafs Stadsgevärsfaktori m/94-14, bolt m/m, converted to 7x57 before export to Germany (just widened the original barrel)
 
Unusual carbine: Yugoslavian M95M 8mm Conversion

Detective work on my part:

*Started life in 1903 as a Steyr contract M95 rifle for Bulgaria in 8x50mm
*Captured by Serbia in June 1913 in the Second Baltic War
*Survived WWI (Serbia used mostly the M91 Moisen-Nagant and the M95 Steyr)
*In 1924 Yugoslavia (formerly Serbia) adopted the 8mm (7.92x57) cartridge
*Rebuilt and cut down as an 8mm Repetier Stutzen (repeating short rifle) in 1938-1939 (#55424 of 122161)
*Conversion utilized a WWI Reparation M95 Austrian 4th Feldjager rifle stock cut down to carbine length of 40.5"
*The conversion closed the bottom of the magazine, added a charger cut-out for the receiver, an internal 5 round clip, a new bolt head and extractor, a Yugoslavian M24 barrel and hand guard, and Mauser type sights. The second 'M' is for Mauser.
*Second line weapon in WWII
*No import mark, bolt mis-match
 
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Unusual carbine: Yugoslavian M95M 8mm Conversion

Detective work on my part:

*Started life in 1903 as a Steyr contract M95 rifle for Bulgaria in 8x50mm
*Captured by Serbia in June 1913 in the Second Baltic War
*Survived WWI (Serbia used mostly the M91 Moisen-Nagant and the M95 Steyr)
*In 1924 Yugoslavia (formerly Serbia) adopted the 8mm (7.92x57) cartridge
*Rebuilt and cut down as an 8mm Repetier Stutzen (repeating short rifle) in 1938-1939 (#55424 of 122161)
*Conversion utilized a WWI Reparation M95 Austrian 4th Feldjager rifle stock cut down to carbine length of 40.5"
*The conversion closed the bottom of the magazine, added a charger cut-out for the receiver, an internal 5 round clip, a new bolt head and extractor, a Yugoslavian M24 barrel and hand guard, and Mauser type sights. The second 'M' is for Mauser.
*Second line weapon in WWII
*No import mark, bolt mis-match

That looks familiar!
 
Mix-master NPM M1 carbine; sub contract Union Switch and Signal 'U' receiver. Hand guard and recoil plate are NPM. No import mark. Small parts are mixed as is to be expected: SJ stock and SG trigger group. WA hammer and mag release, JI bayonet mount, IO flat bolt, U front sight (correct) and op-rod. Three magazines (U, SI, and LU), NOS stock pouch “D. M. Shoe Co.” dated 1943, original flash hider, original experimental unissued Engineer Holster (LUB. CORP. 1943), and a reproduction tan web sling and oiler.











MS
 
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A Romi G build

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A pretty 55 Tula

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An SAR1 and Colt AR along with the hardcore hoodie

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A laminate M44

M44a.jpg


Yugo 98

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Carbines

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Just Carbines

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lots of nice stuff appeared in this thread.

i also like the mercury dime being added. [laugh]

i'm total homo for coins. reminds me of being a kid and hunting for them with my father.
 
Carbine is a generic term for short or handy rifle. Specific types should be named in the title or you just get flooded with all kinds of handy rifles,,LOL.

 
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