litteratur og hjemmesider om klassiske "mærker"

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Spang
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litteratur og hjemmesider om klassiske "mærker"

Indlæg af Spang » 28. feb 2005, 21:07

hej, jeg er meget ny her, selv om interessen for jagt og våben er temmelig gammel.
jeg leder efter hjemmesider og litteratur som man kan låne på bib. omhandlende mauser, carl gustav og husqvarna. er der nogle der kan råde mig?
jeg vil jo gerne vide hvad jeg skal tænd på når jeg læser om en specifik husqvarna til salg nord for polarcirklen (og om jeg skal tænde)

jeg håber at jeg får sendt dette rigtigt og ikke laver for meget rod herinde.

hilsen spang
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Indlæg af The Dane » 28. feb 2005, 21:23

Opinions are like a$$holes, everybody seems to have one.


Henrik

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Re: litteratur og hjemmesider om klassiske "mærker"

Indlæg af Lycon » 28. feb 2005, 21:53

spang skrev:hej, jeg er meget ny her, selv om interessen for jagt og våben er temmelig gammel.
jeg leder efter hjemmesider og litteratur som man kan låne på bib. omhandlende mauser, carl gustav og husqvarna. er der nogle der kan råde mig?
Nu skriver du låne på biblioteket, jeg ved ikke hvor bogstavligt det skal tages, men her har du et par titler at gå udfra:
Sniper Variations of the German K98k Rifle.
$47.50

by Richard D. Law
Volume II of Backbone of the Wehrmacht
Deluxe First Edition, 1996
240 pages, 291 illustrations
Sniper Variations completes this important author's in-depth study of the German K98k rifle by concentrating on the telescope-sighted K98k, the specialist rifle of choice for most German snipers during World War II. Three different types of telescopes were mounted, on specially selected K98ks, first by designated Army Ordnance Supply Offices of the Heereszeugamter (H Za) and then by selected private contractors, using a variety of mounts. All are fully discussed and clearly depicted. As in Volume I of Backbone of the Wehrmacht, Sniper Variations is enriched by many rare, previously unpublished official documents and original photographs.
MAUSER: Original Oberndorf Sporting Rifles.
$89.95

by John Speed, Walter Schmid, and Reiner Herrmann
Deluxe First Edition, 1997
508 pages, 983 illustrations, 114 in colour
This remarkable book breaks new ground with never-before-published photos and data about Mauser-Werke itself, then offers the most exhaustive study ever published of the design origins and manufacturing history of the Original Oberndorf Mauser sporter, a rifle produced in a vast number of calibres and variations right alongside the military Gewehr 98 (before WWI) and later, the K98k.Includes many magnificent Mauser sporters made up by the finest armsmakers in England, America, and Germany, using 98 actions supplied from Oberndorf, plus the most comprehensive Serial Number/Date chart ever.
Sincr WWII, Mauser has been reluctant to put all its eggs in the 98 basket, and numerous other avenues have been explored, while today, sporters built on refurbished military 98 actions are still in production.
Mauser Smallbores: Sporting, Target & Training Rifles.
$67.50

by John Speed
Deluxe First Edition, 1998
372 pages, 773 illustrations; 40 in colour
With the aid of the world's leading smallbore rifle collectors, we present 15 in-depth chapters and two appendices full of original, previously unpublished photos, charts, drawings and data on the history of all models of smallbore sporting, target and training rifles produced by the legendary Mauser-Werke of Oberndorf am Nekar, Germany.

Includes a full chapter called Wehrsport (paramilitary training) devoted to the marketing and use of smallbore trainers by the Hitler-Jugend and other Nazi political and military groups.
Crown Jewels: The Mauser in Sweden - A Century of Accuracy and Precision.
by Dana Jones
$49.95


Deluxe First Edition, 2003
312 pages, 691 illustrations


Here is the first in-depth study of all the Swedish Mausers - the 6.5mm m/94 carbines, m/96 long rifles, m/38 short rifles, Swedish K98Ks (called the m/39 in 7.92x57mm, then, after rechambering to fire the 8x63mm machinegun cartridge, the m/40); sniper rifles, and other military adaptations such as grenade launchers and artillery simulators.

Then the focus shifts to the experimental prototypes and trial match rifles of the 1950s - some in .30-'06 - and finally to the precision competition rifles which became famous around the world. These include the CG 63 and its two military versions, the m/6 and m/7; the folding-stock CG 62 and the CG 63S Biathlon rifles; the CG 63E, which was approved by the British National Rifle Association; the CG 63 Junior Rifles in .22LR calibre; and the later match rifles such as the FFV 67 and CG 80.

The Swedish 6.5x55mm m/94 cartridge, one of the most accurate military rounds ever designed, was further improved in 1941 by the adoption of the excellent m/41 boat-tailed "torpedo" bullet, and numerous loadings are depicted and discussed.

We also cover a wide variety of the micrometer-adjustment rear sight inserts and "diopter" receiver sights which were produced in order to allow shooters to take full advantage of the accuracy and precision of the Swedish Mauser. Full chapters on bayonets and the many accessories, both military and civilian, conclude.
Hitler's Garands: German Self-Loading Rifles of World War II.
$69.95

by W. Darrin Weaver
Deluxe First Edition, 2001
392 pages, 590 illustrations

Hitler's Wehrmacht began World War II armed with the bolt action K98k, a rifle only cosmetically different from that with which Imperial Germany had fought the Great War a quarter-century earlier. Then in 1940, the Heereswaffenamt (HWaA, the Army Weapons Office) issued a requirement for a new self-loading rifle. The resulting Mauser G41(M) and flap-locked Walther G41(W) were both hampered by gas-takeoff at the muzzle, which resulted in arms which were overlong, clumsy, muzzle-heavy, unreliable, and consequently unpopular with the troops.

Taking their lead from the Russians, Walther copied (and patented) the gas system of the Tokarev SVT self-loader, grafting it onto the flap-locked bolt of the G41 to create the G43, which was only produced during the last nineteen desperate months of World War II.

The collecting of the G/K43 and its accoutrements has become very popular in recent years, with very high prices being realized for these rifles and their accessories. This has created a burgeoning industry in "reproductions" for the collector market. In response to this the author has gone to great pains to illustrate the many fraudulent markings seen on components and scopes, and to identify the many out-and-out fake magazine pouches, stocks, and especially scope cases and mounts, which abound today. Spurious these may be, but cheap they are not; and this chapter alone is well worth the price of the book.
US Rifle M14 - From John Garand to the M21.
$49.95

by R Blake Stevens
Revised Second Edition, 1991
352 pages, 246 illustrations
The definitive study of the last, true "lock, stock, and barrel" 'T' US battle rifle, US Rifle M14 spans the fateful postwar era of the decline of Army Ordnance as the arbiter of US small arms development. The story begins with an in-depth examination of wartime modifications to the M1 rifle (M1E1 - M1E14) and the original Garand-based ëTí series (T20, T20E1, T20E2; T22, T22E1, T22E2; and T27). Then the rest of the T series (T28; T31; T33; T35; T36; T37; T25; T47; T44, T44E1 - T44E6). The adoption of the T44E4 as the M14 in 1957; scopes, silencers, and folding stocks; the M14 in Vietnam. Now with more information on the latest USAMTU modifications which transform the M14 into the gilt-edge M21.
The Gas Trap Garand.
$59.95

by Billy Pyle
Deluxe First Edition, 1999
316 pages, 383 illustrations
The M1 Garand was arguably the most respected service rifle in US history, and a veritable library of books has been written about it.

However, this is the only book that tells the complete, in-depth story of the rarest Garands of them all: the initial 80 Model Shop rifles, made under the personal supervision of John Garand himself in 1934 and 1935; and the first 50,000+ production "gas trap" M1s, made between August, 1937 and August, 1940.

There were only three men who knew all the intimate details of the highly classified M1 project: John Garand; his Chief Model Maker, J R "Red" Stimson; and Art Tuttle, John Garand's personal "Troubleshooter". The respected Garand authority Billy Pyle was fortunate enough to be befriended by the latter, and this groundbreaking study is the result.
De fåes alle fra Collector Grade Publications, et meget seriøst forlag som er absolut førende hvad faglitteraur på våben angår. Jeg har selv købt flere af bøgerne og det er absolut topkvalitet.

Lycon :cool:
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