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The Modelo 1905 is a pistol designed by Ferdinand Ritter von Mannlicher in 1899 and originally produced in Austria as the Mannlicher Model 1901. [2] 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).
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 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.
Sabie de cavalerie Model 1906; Sabie de ofițer Model 1893; Sabie de ofițer cavalerie Model 1909; Cavalry lance Model 1908; Sidearms. Bayard M1915; Ruby M1914; Saint Étienne M1892; Smith & Wesson No.3; Steyr M1912; Rifles. Berthier M1907/15; Lebel M1886/93; Mannlicher M1888/90; Mannlicher M1893 (Standard issue rifle. Also known as the M93 ...
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.
Model 1908: copy of the Mannlicher Model 1900 in 6.35 mm; Model 1914: pistol of the Ruby type in .25 ACP, improved Mannlicher system caliber 7.65 mm for the French army. Izarra: pistol of the hammerless type caliber .25 ACP, produced between 1905 and 1906 in small numbers. In .32 ACP, of Ruby pattern, produced from 1914 until 1921.
The 9.5×57mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (MS) cartridge was adopted for the M-1910 MS rifle and carbine in 1910. [3] ( Note: The name Schoenauer is correctly spelled Schönauer with an “umlaut” over the “o” in German, although the rifles themselves are stamped with the German umlauted ""oe"") The 9.5×57mm MS is also known as the 9.5×56mm MS, the 9.5×56.7mm MS, and the .375 Rimless ...
The Roth–Steyr is a locked-breech pistol, which allows the barrel and bolt to recoil together within a hollow receiver. It is chambered for a cartridge specific to this model. The Roth–Steyr does not have a detachable magazine, but features a fixed magazine loaded from the top with stripper clips.