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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]
Infantry Model 1889 (Belgian Mauser) ©Armémuseum - Original / License. Year entered service: 1889. ... Rifle Model 1890 (Turkish Mauser) ©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons. Year entered service ...
Paul Mauser designed the 7.65×53mm Mauser (1889) and 7×57mm Mauser (1892) rifle cartridges. These cartridges were chambered in military Mauser service rifles and were high-performance service cartridge designs compared to other contemporary smokeless powder service cartridges such as the 8mm Lebel (1886), 8×50mmR Mannlicher (1890) and .303 ...
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]
The 7.65×53mm Argentine (designated as the 7,65 × 53 Arg. by the C.I.P.) [2] is a first-generation smokeless powder rimless bottlenecked centerfire rifle cartridge developed for use in the Mauser Model 1889 rifle by Paul Mauser of the Mauser company.
Pages in category "Mauser rifles" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total. ... Mauser Model 1889; Mauser Model 1893; Mauser Model 1895; Mauser ...
Mauser Model 1889 and derivatives; Mauser Model 1893 [10] 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.
In August of the same year it was awarded a contract to build around 140,000 Mauser Model 1889 rifles and 10,000 carbines for the Belgian Army, but it turned out that they underestimated the cost of production during a European war and underbid the price (the first rifles were only completed in September 1916 and only arrived to Belgium in 1918).