you may be talking about the artillery model or navy model luger. if the rear sight is located just in front of the chamber, it is a artillery model. if there is no rear sight over the chamber it is a navy model. Also, the barrel may have been changed ??? look under the barrel, where it screws in. the should be a set of numbers which match the serial number of the gun. send me a pic and I'll tell you f a artillery or navy model...
The Luger P08 was a standard sidearm of the German Military in both World Wars.
The P08 Luger was a pistol, and a very iconic one of the Germany during both World Wars. It was also the pistol which introduced the 9x19mm cartridge (also known as the 9mm Parabellum or 9mm Luger).
It's the Luger .45 ACP pistol.
Not sure that they all wanted it, but a Luger is a well proven pistol that works reliably.
value depends on overall condition..................
The Luger was a standard issue sidearm in WW1. The P-38 pistol replaced it in WW2.
The Luger P08 was the side arm used by the German Army for both World War 1 and World War 2. The pistol was deisgned by George Luger and went into production in 1908, thus Pistol 08 or P08. The design had a unique toggle receiver mechanism. The gun has only 2 screws and they hold on the wood grips. This design uses close tolerance, sliding mechanisms that does not withstand dirt and grime. That is why the Luger holster completely encloses the pistol.
The Luger had a Year stamped on top of the receiver just behind the barrel.
it is either a erfurt pistol or an Erfurt rifle, which ???
The Luger P08 was the side arm used by the German Army for both World War 1 and World War 2. The pistol was deisgned by George Luger and went into production in 1908, thus Pistol 08 or P08. The design had a unique toggle receiver mechanism. The gun has only 2 screws and they hold on the wood grips. This design uses close tolerance, sliding mechanisms that does not withstand dirt and grime. That is why the Luger holster completely encloses the pistol.
3 types: standard model with 4" barrel artillery model with 8" barrel (world war 1) naval model also with 8" barrel Lugers came in two calibers. 9mm and 30 cal. luger
it's possible, but how would you ship it to the US, if you live in the US