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Fewer than 1,000 M1896s and M1897/01s were manufactured, in several variations including a detachable shoulder stock model, a carbine version, and a trial model tested by the Swiss military. The Mannlicher M1898 was a complete redesign, moving the magazine back, into the location of the later M1901, for loading from an 8-round stripper clip.
The Mannlicher Model 1901 was an improved version of the Model 1900, both of which were produced by Österreichische Waffenfabriks-Gesellschaft (commonly known as Steyr). All of these models have the same basic design and operation, but minimal adjustments were made to improve each of them. The Modelo 1905 is the version of the Model 1901 that ...
The early years of the 20th century saw fundamentally the same rifle offered in other, larger Mannlicher–Schönauer calibres including the 8×56mm Model 1908, the 9×56mm Model 1905 and the 9.5×57mm Mannlicher–Schönauer Model 1910, but none of these sold as well as the 1903 Model in 6.5mm.
Mannlicher Model 1888 ©"M1888 -Steyr Mannlicher" by D. VanVoorhis is licensed under BY-SA 3.0. - Original / License. Year entered service: 1888. Type: Bolt-action service rifle.
The US M1 carbine used a short stroke piston to impart momentum to a slide that opened the bolt, combining features introduced in the Mannlicher Model 95 and Model 100. [3] The Model 1905 used a short recoil action with a tilting locking block. This was same principle Mannlicher used in his 1901 pistol-caliber carbine.
Mannlicher Model 1895 ©Andrew Bossi / Wikimedia Commons - Original / License. Maximum effective range: 1,320 ft. Country of origin: Austria-Hungary. Year: 1895.
Mannlicher's Model 1891 rifle was adopted by Romania in 1892 as the Mannlicher M1893 and the Netherlands in 1895. They used the first of a series of 6.5-millimetre (0.26 in) Mannlicher cartridges [1] which became the standard service rifle cartridge for the Romanian Mannlicher M1893 from 1893 to 1938, [2] and the Dutch Geweer M. 95 from 1895 to ...
Steyr Mannlicher M1901 pistol; Winchester M1901 shotgun; M1901 disappearing carriage, designation of the US Board of Fortifications; F28 Sight M1901 variant, see List of U.S. Army fire control and sighting material by supply catalog designation; Ehrhardt 7.5 cm Model 1901, Artillery used by the Norwegian Army