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WEAPON LIBRARY
Assault Rifles  ( 55 )

Handguns  ( 15 )

Shotguns  ( 19 )

Rifles  ( 7 )

Submachine Guns  ( 4 )

Machine Gun  ( 20 )

Misc  ( 5 )




Choose a weapon from the list below:

Beretta 92F
Colt M1911
Desert Eagle
FN Five-seveN
GLOCK 17
GLOCK 21
GLOCK 22
GLOCK 24
GLOCK 30
HK MK.23
HK USP
Luger
SIG-Sauer SIG Pro
Walther P99
Walther PPK



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Luger
Parabellum-Pistole



Available Images




Technical Data



Manufacturer
Deutsche Waffen- und Munitions Fabriken

Country Of Origin
Germany

Date Of Introduction
1898

Caliber
7.65 or 9 x 19 mm Luger/Parabellum

Feed System
Magazine

Rate Of Fire
NA

Weights
Unknown

Length
230 mm


More Information *


The Parabellum-Pistole (Pistol Parabellum), popularly known as the Luger pistol is a semi-automatic self-loading pistol introduced by Deutsche Waffen- und Munitions Fabriken (DWM) starting in the 1890s. It existed primarily as a popular military and civilian handgun of the early 20th century. The basic design and its variants have been well known under a variety of popular and military designations (e.g. Ordonnanzpistole 00, and P08).

In modern times it has been popularized through its use by Germany during WWII, though it was used by many other countries and its most prolific period of use was earlier in the century. Its very notable in firearms history for being the firearm the 9 mm Parabellum was introduced with, though the type has been chambered for a variety of rounds and it was first introduced with a 7.65 mm Parabellum round.

It is a toggle lock pistol based on principles by Hiram Maxim. It is semi-automatic, removable magazine-fed, and operates on the short-recoil principle. The pistol, designed by Georg Luger, was an evolution of the earlier Hugo Borchardt design, the Borchardt C-93. The Luger-Borchardt was introduced in 1898.


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1

P08   -  Illinois, United States



Poor photo of the Luger


What is that thing? Looks like it an airsoft gun! Email me and I'll provide you with a good pic.

* All text in the "More Information" section is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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