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The Mauser Model 1889 is a bolt-action rifle of Belgian origin. It became known as the 1889 Belgian Mauser, 1890 Turkish Mauser, and 1891 Argentine Mauser. [3]
The Model 1889 rifle and carbine, including Turkish Model 1890, Model 1916 and Model 1899/36 variants, all chambered in 7.65×53mm Mauser [1] The Model 1893 and 1894 rifle and carbine, chambered in 7×57mm Mauser, produced for Spain and Brazil [2] while some were used by the Belgian Gendarmerie, the Garde Civique and the Congo Free State [3 ...
Model 1924 / Model 1930: Carbine and rifle based on the Mauser 98 carbine. Karabiner 98k: 7.92×57mm Mauser bolt-action rifle produced post-World War II. Model 1950: .30-06 Springfield bolt-action rifle; updated version of the Model 1930. Model 30-11: 7.62×51mm NATO bolt-action sniper rifle developed from FN-built Mauser Karabiner 98k rifles.
Belgian Mauser; Belgian Mauser Model 1935; F. FR8; G. Gewehr 98; K. Karabinek wz. 1929 ... Mauser M 98; Mauser Model 1871; Mauser Model 1889; Mauser Model 1893 ...
The Model 1935 combined elements of the Mauser 1889 (breech, magazine and stock) and of the Gewehr 98, but it was shorter. [2] Some Model 35 rifles were modernised Mauser 98. [2] Both the Manufacture d’Armes de L’État and the FN Herstal produced it between 1935 and 1940. [3] A sniping version was also developed before the war. [2] [4]
Mauser Model 1889 (often modernized to Model 1889/36 version) Belgian Mauser Model 1935; Mauser Model 1893; Lebel M1886/93; Mauser Gewehr 98; Lee-Enfield; Mosin-Nagant M1891/30; Winchester M1894; Mauser K98AZ (Given in reparation payments to Belgium post WW1 and issued to reserve units)
Belgian Mauser Model 1935; F. FN Model 1949; M. FN Model 24 and Model 30; Mauser Model 1889; Mauser Model 1903; Mauser Model 1904; Mauser Standardmodell; V. Vz. 24
The original 1889 pattern military ball ammunition was introduced in the Mauser Model 1889 and loaded with a 13.65 grams (210.7 gr) round-nosed bullet fired at a muzzle velocity of 650 m/s (2,133 ft/s) with 2,884 J (2,127 ft⋅lbf) muzzle energy.