Schmidt Rubin 1889 Serial Nos


Schmidt Rubin
Model 1889
7.5 x 53.5mm
Serial No: 108288
Date: 1892

Obsolete Calibre.
£550

This example is in Excellent Condition

Manufactured in 1891, matching numbers on the Bolt, Magazine & Action.

7.5 X 53.5mm Model 1889 Swiss issue Schmidt Rubin service rifle.£695. 7.5 X 53.5mm Model 1889 Swiss issue Schmidt Rubin service rifle. Blued action with straight pull bolt serial numbered to the rifle. Walnut stock with finger grooves to the fore end and various Swiss military inspection marks to the butt. Swiss Schmidt Rubin M1889 Rifle REF (Reference Library). ANTIQUE Swiss Schmidt Rubin Model 1889 Rifle. In nice looking condition, full military with a 30 inch barrel, crisp straight pull action and 12 round capacity magazine (state of the art 1889).

RubinSchmidt Rubin 1889 Serial Nos

Excellent bore, comes with original sling, muzzle cap & magazine restrictor clip

Serial No Range for 1892: (24901 - 115000)

Officially adopted in 1889, the Schmidt-Rubin Model 1889 was the result of several years of testing.
In 1882 Eduard Rubin began testing the first small-caliber copper-jacketed bullet which could successfully withstand high velocities.

Rubin

In 1885, this round was combined with Rudolf Schmidt's first straight-pull action.

Schmidt rubin 1889 serial number

The straight-pull action relied upon an actuating rod, set in a channel to the right of the breech, to rotate the bolt though a
helical channel cut in the bolt sleeve. Twin locking lugs were positioned midway through the bolt sleeve, locking the bolt into the receiver
directly above the trigger.

Over the next three years both the rifle design and cartridge were refined. The final result was adopted on June 26, 1889.
The Model 1889 was chambered for the 7.5x53.5 round (GP90) with a 213 grain paper patched round producing
a velocity of 1935fps. The cartridges were held in a detachable magazine holding 12 rounds.
Production ceased in 1897, with approximately 211,890 rifles being produced.

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Customers are advised that you must by law be 18 years of age or older to purchase deactivated weapons, swords, knives and bayonets from this website. Customers, who purchase any antique/obsolete firearms, cannot be a Prohibited Person under Section 21 of the 1968 Firearms Act as amended. By placing an order you are declaring that you are of legal age to do so, that you are not a Prohibited Person and that you accept the Conditions of Sale.

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A fine example of the Model 1889 12 shot repeating rifle

Schmidt Rubin 1889 Serial Nos 1

Lot 37 of 226: Swiss Model 1889 Schmidt Rubin Straight Pull, Bolt Action, Repeating Rifle, Serial Number 136506, Caliber 7.5 mm Swiss. Schmidt Rubin 1889 great condition with matching numbers. Soldiers service numbers engraved on stock. Functions and shoots flawlessly. Beautiful and getting very sought after. Pre-1900 so no PTA or registration required. Can be delivered straight to your door. Grab a piece of history that's becoming scarce. This is the nicest example I've ever seen the timber is lustrous and nearly ding free.

Despite containing an extraordinarily sophisticated technological design within it’s action, this rifle is viewed as an Antique, Obsolete calibre weapon and as such it is possible to hold and keep under Section 58(ii) of the UK firearms act with no license. It has a center-fire, 12 shot repeating action with flawless reliability chambered in 7.5 x 53.5mm rimless discontinued cartridge with a calibre not unlike the British .303. It is fully functioning, has not been deactivated and does not need to be. It is even more strange then if the holder wants to shoot it, he is perfectly within his rights, as long as he possesses a valid Firearms Ticket, to have said firearm entered on his ticket and use it on approved ranges. Otherwise it can remain as part of a collection displayed even outside a gun room perfectly legally. Don’t quote me verbatim, but that is the gist of the situation at the time of writing.

The Swiss M1889 is a superbly designed piece of engineering typical of the Swiss. It was capable of an accurate range of double its predecessor the Vetterli. It was designed to use a semi-smokeless powder. It is a physically long looking rifle but was actually only 1/2″ longer than the Mauser 71/84, though much more slender in build. One of the factors which makes it so long, is the intricate action which has an very long bolt. The design is termed “Straight Pull” simply by means of its operation. With the rifle held steady in the left hand, by the fore-end, the bolt arm is literally pulled straight to the rear, so ejecting the expended case backwards over the users head. When the bolt is then pushed back into battery, the bolt face will pick up the next round and force it forwards into the chamber. The whole process can take approximately one second – and is very unlikely to fail ! If the user is directed only to use single shot, then the magazine is literally dropped out of battery by a lever on the side. With the magazine still being held securely within the stock, but lower down, the bolt face is unable to pick up the next round and the magazine can be held in reserve whilst rifle is loaded round by round.

During the incredibly simple process of bolt withdrawal the rifle is actually carrying out some intricate work. The locking lugs of the bolt are causing the center of the bolt to turn and so produce two effects on the used cartridge. One; it is drawing the case rearward but Two: it is actually causing a twisting motion which aids primary extraction. This force exerted breaks any seal which may have formed between the case and the chamber wall. This makes it an incredibly advanced concept for such an early rifle. Merge easy and rapid operation with renown accuracy and the troops couldn’t wait to get their hands on their new rifles.

This M1889 is 51.1/4″ long overall. The round blued barrel is 30.3/4″ long. The trigger pull measures 12.1/2″ to center. The serial number on most parts is “47628” which makes year of production 1892. Strangely, the only item which seems to have been replaced is the 12 shot box magazine which protrudes out of the bottom of the action; it carries the number “187016”. The blued receiver has two short grooves in it and one longer groove. The rifle has a rear sight graduated from 300 meters to 2000. There are multiple Swiss Cross inspectors’ and ownership marks on different components of the weapon. It is generally showing high edge wear on the steel parts of the rifle. The stock and hand-guard are both in very good condition showing a pleasing dark patina with a strong Tiger stripe over the top of the butt-stock.

Equipped with a steel butt-plate with matching serial number. Two sling swivels with original dark grey leather sling attached. The sling is marked and can just be read. The mid-band carries the forward sling swivel. The front band incorporates both the rifle stacking hook and the bayonet lug. Simple inverted “V” front sight. Action is slick and works well. The bore is excellent with strong three groove RH twist rifling, no pitting or misting.

100 pagine di algebra lineare pdf download. A fine example of a highly technical early, repeater for collection and appreciation. Download garagesale basic (1 4 2 crack for mac.

£ 595. SOLD

Schmidt Rubin 1889 Serial Nos 5

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