most often in a holster.................
The Luger P08 was a standard sidearm of the German Military in both World Wars.
Try asking at Jan C. Still's luger forum.
German Luger pistols before 1902 used a proprietary 7.65mm bottleneck cartridge, sometimes referred to as .30 Luger in US. After 1902 Lugers used the 9mm round, also commonly known as 9mm Para (Parabellum) and 9mm Luger.
yes....................
a dated 1937 luger maked 'S 42' was made by the Mauser Factory
if you actually mean 'luger', it was a pistol used by the germans in ww2
the Germans found the P38 was cheaper to make and did not jam as readily as the luger..............................only difference is the gun design.
not likely. Germans did not keep records as to who guns were assigned
Did the germans nickel or chrome plate luger models?
For an infantryman with standard issue equipment, they would generally carry a 9mm Luger and a Mauser rifle (Karabiner 98k), a bolt action rifle that held 5 cartridges at a time, while the Luger, I am not sure but most 9mm vary from 5 to 30 cartridges.Another gun that was used was the MP40 submachine gun, along with the MP43.The MG42 was also used as a light weight machine gun.The Germans were also issued Mauser bayonets and Steilhandgrenates, or German grenades.
to my knowledge there is no real look up for lugers. No detail records were kept by the Germans........
go to: gunbroker.com search 'luger'
Keith Luger is 6'.
The plural of Luger would be Lugers.
the luger is a German design, not french. luger value depends on overall condition.......
by reference to 'luger' ammo, one believes it to be a 9mm cartridge, which is the cartrige for the German luger. however, there are many other pistol that were made to fire the 9mm luger cartridge. in addition, the luger was also made in the '30 cal luger' which is a smaller bullet in a necked down cartridge.
Browning did not make the Luger