- Springfield Krag Serial Number Lookup 336168
- Springfield Krag Serial Number Lookup For Guns
- Springfield 30-40 Krag Serial Number Lookup
Springfield Krag Serial Number Lookup 336168
Springfield Krag Serial Number Lookup For Guns
Antique Springfield Rifle 1892 Krag Serial number 45 Description: Serial #45.30-40 Krag, 29' barrel with a fine, bright bore that has a few very minor specks of freckling within the grooves. This is an 1896 spec. Converted rifle that has an 1894 dated receiver with the later third type crowned barrel retaining 75-80% of the original blue. The serial number tells quite a different story. So, it may just be a poorly maintained rifle about which you can spin a tale or two if you are so inclined. As for its overall condition I can recall seeing surplus Krag rifles for sale in the late 1950's - early 1960's that were pristine, and this one is certainly not that. Antique Springfield Rifle 1892 Krag Serial number 45 Description: Serial #45.30-40 Krag, 29' barrel with a fine, bright bore that has a few very minor specks of freckling within the grooves. History of Springfield 30-40 Krag rifle? What conflict's has the Springfield 30-40 Krag been involved in?
Springfield 30-40 Krag Serial Number Lookup
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A Brief History of Krag-Jorgensen Rifles and CarbinesBy Tom PearceU.S. Magazine Rifles and Carbines Models of 1892 through 1899 The desire to improve upon the then standard caliber .45 black powder arms, from tests conducted during 1889 and 1890, brought about the first caliber .30 smokeless-powder cartridge to be adopted by the United States. Selection of magazine arms from various U.S. and foreign inventors during the early 1890’s, resulted in final approval of the five shot bolt-action weapon that was loaded through a hinged gate on the right side of the receiver. This design was submitted by Col. Ole Krag and Eric Jorgensen of Norway in 1892. Common names given were; “Krag-Jorgensen”,“.30-40 Krag” or simply “Krags”. During the ten years (1894-1904) of Krag production less than 500,000 arms were completed and changes to reduce costs and facilitate ease of manufacture resulted in non-interchangeability of parts requiring many new model designations. All were manufactured at Springfield Armory in Massachusetts. Similarly with improvements to the smokeless-powder base, which effected trajectory, front and rear sights were recalibrated often, requiring again, many rear sight model designations. Though short lived, the discoveries through trial and error, experiments with prototypes and in field usage during the Spanish-American War, Boxer Rebellion and Philippine Insurrection, gave the foundation to U.S. military shoulder arms that we have today. Rifles, Models of 1892, 1896 and 1898 Carbines, Models of 1892 (Prototype), 1896, 1898 and 1899 Rear Sights, Models of 1892, 1896, 1898, 1901 and 1902 IMPORTANT MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION |