When Sweden decided to replace its Remington Rolling Block rifles with a more modern repeating rifle design, they tested models from Mauser, Mannlicher, Lee, and Krag. The Mauser 1893 was chosen as the winner of the competition, with a few modifications (most notably a change to allow the safety to be engaged whether the striker was cocked or not). A carbine was adopted first - the infantry rifle would follow a few years later. An initial batch of m/1894 carbines was purchased from Mauser Oberndorf, to start the military transition while the Carl Gustav factory tooled up to begin licensed production.
The original m/94 Swedish carbines used a heavy nosecap to protect the front sight, but did not have a fitting for a bayonet. This was changed in 1914, with new production guns being fitted with a Lee-Enfield style bayonet lug below the muzzle (and many existing carbines were updated to this new configuration) and designated the model m/94-14. Production continued sporadically until 1932, with most of the
1 view
114
28
3 months ago 00:26:05 1
How Accurate are “Vintage“ Sniper Rifles? 1MOA All Day Long?
8 months ago 00:46:10 9
Sunday Shoot-a-Round #222
1 year ago 00:00:25 2
Swedish M38
1 year ago 00:17:01 1
Husqvarna Swedish Sporter Mausers
1 year ago 00:19:00 1
The Rasheed: Egypt’s Semiauto Battle Carbine From Sweden