Forgotten Weapons
Development of the Luger Automatic Pistol
2016 • E223 Oct 18, 2016
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Lugers! there are approximately a gazillion different recognized varieties, because the pistol became so popular and iconic. And yet...they all kinda look the same, don't they? (If you are a Luger collector, don't answer that!) A great many ( I daresay the significant majority) of the Luger variations are minor changes in production details. So, what was involved in the mechanical evolution of the Luger?
Not much, really - which is a testament to the talents of Georg Luger. He got the gun almost totally right on his first try. There are, however, two major variants of the Luger mechanically - the 1900 model and the 1906 model. In this video I will walk through the differences between these two, as well as the initial Borchardt pistol that Luger used as his starting point and a couple other relevant milestones (a Swiss trials gun and a transitional French trials gun). And since they are the most common of the military models, we will also take a quick look at the German Army, Navy, and Artillery models.
Related:
Early Automatic Pistol Cartridges: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msQI6ongp24
Development of the 1911: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgOicEVA4u8
Development of the Walther P38: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXAMma6mUq8
Cool Forgotten Weapons Merch! http://shop.bbtv.com/collections/forgotten-weapons
Lugers! there are approximately a gazillion different recognized varieties, because the pistol became so popular and iconic. And yet...they all kinda look the same, don't they? (If you are a Luger collector, don't answer that!) A great many ( I daresay the significant majority) of the Luger variations are minor changes in production details. So, what was involved in the mechanical evolution of the Luger?
Not much, really - which is a testament to the talents of Georg Luger. He got the gun almost totally right on his first try. There are, however, two major variants of the Luger mechanically - the 1900 model and the 1906 model. In this video I will walk through the differences between these two, as well as the initial Borchardt pistol that Luger used as his starting point and a couple other relevant milestones (a Swiss trials gun and a transitional French trials gun). And since they are the most common of the military models, we will also take a quick look at the German Army, Navy, and Artillery models.
Related:
Early Automatic Pistol Cartridges: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msQI6ongp24
Development of the 1911: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgOicEVA4u8
Development of the Walther P38: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXAMma6mUq8