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Mauser C98: The System That Cost Paul Mauser an Eye 

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One of Paul Mauser's lifelong projects was the design of a semiautomatic rifle for the German military. He would go through a multitude of different designs searching for something that would be sufficiently reliable, durable, and simple - and ultimately he would never fulfill the goal. But his efforts left us a trail of very interesting prototypes!
In 1898 he conceived this sort of flapper-locked system, on a short recoil action. It is actually a pretty clever system mechanically, but apparently lacked sufficient protection against an out of battery detonation. In 1901, one of the C98 rifles of this pattern (but not this specific gun) suffered an out of battery detonation while Mauser was firing it, and the explosion broke his finger and took his left eye. After this experience, Mauser would not give up on his search for a military selfloader, but his subsequent designs (like the long-recoil C02 pattern) would have a much greater emphasis on mechanical safety.
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30 сен 2018

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Комментарии : 452   
@epl803
@epl803 5 лет назад
"...changed his view on rifle safety" pun intended?
@thegoldencaulk2742
@thegoldencaulk2742 5 лет назад
Convinced him to take another _look_ at safety
@omanimitokanimi7976
@omanimitokanimi7976 5 лет назад
He never looked safety with same eyes again.
@SPRKH69
@SPRKH69 5 лет назад
Hindsight is always 20/20
@alexanderwaterman4179
@alexanderwaterman4179 5 лет назад
You beat me to it, literally had this exact comment typed up hahaha
@anttitheinternetguy3213
@anttitheinternetguy3213 5 лет назад
He clearly didn't have much of an eye for safety hazards
@colarisaka
@colarisaka 5 лет назад
Interesting fact: Peter Paul Mauser's son-in-law just happened to be a surgeon of Opthalmology. His son-in-law removed the destroyed eye.
@zacmorgenstern7370
@zacmorgenstern7370 5 лет назад
Thank goodness you didnt say "fun fact"
@Midnightspecia1
@Midnightspecia1 5 лет назад
Right? I got a tiny bit of metal shaving in my eye a few years ago. Had to go to the hospital to have it removed...It was one of the most painful things I’ve been through. Even after they took it out it still felt like it was still digging into my skull.
@colarisaka
@colarisaka 5 лет назад
Lux Libertas Eye injuries are no fun!
@nicholaspatton5590
@nicholaspatton5590 5 лет назад
Mauser: I will just put some ice on it. Son in law: No Dad, you need to have your eye removed.
@paulshayter1113
@paulshayter1113 5 лет назад
Midnightspecia1, I know what you mean. Really sucks driving with and eye patch when you're not used to the difference in depth perception.
@lucycarr6065
@lucycarr6065 5 лет назад
"It had a serious impact on Mausers view" You don't say?
@HALO-2304
@HALO-2304 5 лет назад
"It's all fun and games until someone looses an eye." -Paul Mauser
@jagdgeschwader3503
@jagdgeschwader3503 Год назад
Everybody's gangster till the selbsladers start exploding
@Gilmaris
@Gilmaris 5 лет назад
Paul Mauser's mother probably told him that would happen.
@MidnightdoesWoT
@MidnightdoesWoT 5 лет назад
Gilmaris you are going to put you eye out kid
@JvS1711
@JvS1711 5 лет назад
It's all flaps and gewehrs until someone loses an eye.
@hankadelicflash
@hankadelicflash 5 лет назад
Lol. Nice!
@CrudeConduct666
@CrudeConduct666 4 года назад
@@JvS1711 haha that was pretty good
@gabrielkaplowitz596
@gabrielkaplowitz596 7 месяцев назад
She probably did. But he didn’t listen.
@PristineTX
@PristineTX 5 лет назад
Damn... look at that joinery on the forend of the stock. Late 19th Century woodworkers were ridiculously skilled. So glad we live in the age of HD video so we can see those details in your videos, Ian.
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 5 лет назад
PristineTX The entire rifle has a nice, clean detail to it. You won't find that on today's guns that's for sure.
@finnISHY
@finnISHY 5 лет назад
@@joshuakarmann7488 no quite impressive really no doubt mass produced rifles wherent made by skilled artisans but smaller production scale rifles certainly where
@finnISHY
@finnISHY 5 лет назад
@@wizardofahhhs759 sorta a shame most nations have dropped wood for metal and plastic
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 5 лет назад
ZIZEK FOR PRESIDENT Yep, there was a lot more "hands on" work to these guns 100+ years ago. This kind of work is considered custom today.
@ILikeToLaughAtYou
@ILikeToLaughAtYou 5 лет назад
I wish we lived in the age of ridiculously skilled woodworkers so we wouldn’t have to watch it though HD video lol
@dentistguba
@dentistguba 5 лет назад
At least he no longer had to worry about the whole 'close one eye when aiming' debate.
@JohnDoe-iw7zc
@JohnDoe-iw7zc 5 лет назад
Im still confused what the benefit is supposed to be from keeping both open.
@dentistguba
@dentistguba 5 лет назад
@@JohnDoe-iw7zc just situational awareness in actual combat really, can see movement in peripheral vision and also I suppose you can use holdover at long range and see past the sights. If your gun has a lot of recoil you might find it easier to keep a target picture and see if what you shot at went down. Binocular vision could be useful within around 60 meters if your target is camouflaged but most soldiers would just be point shooting by then I'd think.
@JohnDoe-iw7zc
@JohnDoe-iw7zc 5 лет назад
@@dentistguba well i always see double when ive tryed both open lol it seems to hurt my shooting on bow, gun, sligshot everything. Anything i might be doinf wrong
@dELTA13579111315
@dELTA13579111315 4 года назад
@@JohnDoe-iw7zc I'm a year late, but assuming you're right handed you want to aim with the left image. I can aim well enough with both eyes open unless I'm holding a small gun like a Beretta 950, but at the close ranges that would be used I figure I could still hit my target with both eyes open
@JohnDoe-iw7zc
@JohnDoe-iw7zc 4 года назад
@@dELTA13579111315 ok how in the fuck? How do you aim with your left image if that comes from your left eye which isn't lined up to the sights / optic. Having two eyes open is just distracting for me and it feels like all of you are skrewing with me to an extent lol
@Zajuts149
@Zajuts149 5 лет назад
*Cue Music: "Don't go chasing self-loaders" by Paul 'Left-Eye' Mauser*
@michaeldriggers7681
@michaeldriggers7681 5 лет назад
I know the gun's gonna be your way or nothing at all, but that bolt is moving too fast
@grifter3680
@grifter3680 5 лет назад
Lost an eye? Bet he didn't see that coming
@Moorcin
@Moorcin 5 лет назад
Did is the past participle of do. Since he already used a past participle he doesn't need to use past participle form of the main verb in the sentence. Hence 'He didn't (did not) see it coming is the correct form' (the person this was directed at has deleted the post)
@pancakeheaven8262
@pancakeheaven8262 5 лет назад
I didn't see that pun incoming.
@Zretgul_timerunner
@Zretgul_timerunner 5 лет назад
@@Moorcin r/wooosh
@Moorcin
@Moorcin 5 лет назад
@Daniel, The person I was responding to deleted their comment it wasn't to the main poster mate
@MrCarGuy
@MrCarGuy 5 лет назад
@@Moorcin Allow me to correct you now. After the word "comment" you need a semicolon. You also left a period off the end.
@arnekrug939
@arnekrug939 5 лет назад
90%- jokes about Mauser loosing his eye 5%- nice looking rifle 5%- Ian is gun jesus
@trashaimgamer7822
@trashaimgamer7822 5 лет назад
Which gun would Jesus use?
@kabob0077
@kabob0077 5 лет назад
Philly Grea What mortar is Jesus preferred? British, American, Russian, or German?
@weasle2904
@weasle2904 5 лет назад
I thought that "The System that Cost Paul Mauser an Eye" was a metaphor for something bad that happened because of the design for possible patent infringement or potential safety hazards for the buyers. But he actually, legit, lost his left eye from this rifle exploding.
@nateweter4012
@nateweter4012 5 лет назад
“It affected his view of firearm safety” Nicely done. Also, my favorite rifle is the Gewehr 41(m) and it’s interesting to see some likeness.
@kenhelmers2603
@kenhelmers2603 5 лет назад
The machining and fit of that 'test' gun is better than some production guns - very cool. Thanks Ian :)
@twothreebravo
@twothreebravo 5 лет назад
"You'll put your eye out!" -Paul Mauser's Mom
@peterpayne2720
@peterpayne2720 2 года назад
It is really cool to see an early Mauser design. I had no idea they were tinkering with semiautomatic designs so early. I like the aesthetics of this rifle, the magazine and trigger guard remind me of the C96 Pistol. I wonder what about this rifle didn't work enough for Mauser to try offering it to the military.
@rickyracestrickland8927
@rickyracestrickland8927 2 года назад
The fit and finish is outstanding!!! That's a nice looking rifle
@_ArsNova
@_ArsNova 3 года назад
I know I'm very late to this video, and Ian did a great overview of the mechanics, but why exactly was this never adopted? What were the weaknesses and failings of this particular flapper-delayed system?
@dbmail545
@dbmail545 5 лет назад
I like that rear sight. I have used tangent style square notch sights mounted to the rear like an aperture sight and found them quite usable.
@the_lancaster_libertarian
@the_lancaster_libertarian 5 лет назад
Man, thats cool! I love seeing turn of the century designs. These men really were creative. I'm geeking out over this!
@Deedeedee137
@Deedeedee137 2 года назад
This seems like a perfectly reasonable action I wonder why I've never seen anything else like it
@nickloven6728
@nickloven6728 2 года назад
I would bet this action in some way inspired the G3's roller delay system.
@MartinMizner
@MartinMizner 10 месяцев назад
Sad it was lost to the time
@portathegamer4657
@portathegamer4657 5 лет назад
It's so amazing to see such an old rifle in pretty much mint condition. Excellent!
@SuperZipzapman
@SuperZipzapman 5 лет назад
WEAR GOGGLES YOUR EYES ARE PRECIOUS. 30 SECONDS TO PUT ON GLASSES SAVES A LIFETIME OF NO DEPTH PERCEPTION.
@ADRay1999
@ADRay1999 5 лет назад
In today’s world it is but back then it wasn’t
@wolfsworkshop9095
@wolfsworkshop9095 5 лет назад
yup, that's true, i mean, now i always wear them after i lost my right eye (lukily i'm left dominant)
@warrentb1
@warrentb1 5 лет назад
And hospital bills!
@JohnDoe-iw7zc
@JohnDoe-iw7zc 5 лет назад
Umm my grandfather was a machinist and he was working on a spring loaded system of some sort it broke and it had enough force to go through his safety glasses and he lost his right eye (well the vision in it)
@bearblazingbachmann3699
@bearblazingbachmann3699 5 лет назад
Sure.Back then :-)
@terrydiller
@terrydiller 5 лет назад
Ian digresses, then; "Well, that's a digression we won't get into today"... Don't ever change, man.
@HaloGrunt
@HaloGrunt 5 лет назад
Awesome Video! I never knew this gun existed. keep up the awesome work!
@blueband8114
@blueband8114 5 лет назад
Good grief, that is stunning. The workmanship.
@elliottg5987
@elliottg5987 5 лет назад
Beautifully kept rifle, stunning.
@Dieselkraftwerk
@Dieselkraftwerk 5 лет назад
The built quality Looks absolutely amazing!
@luontodokumenttejakaikenik5220
Good to see you doing great, we love you
@bleh8789
@bleh8789 5 лет назад
Wuh. What happened
@JohnDoe-iw7zc
@JohnDoe-iw7zc 5 лет назад
Yeah I'm confused was he injuered?
@Jacob-yg7lz
@Jacob-yg7lz 5 лет назад
Yeah same, what happened?
@jasonirwin4631
@jasonirwin4631 5 лет назад
Ian are you trying to make bad puns. This type of rifle took Mauser his eye so it changed his view on gun safety.
@mazkact
@mazkact 5 лет назад
Very elegant. Hard to believe an out of battery safety was not incorporated in the design.
@megachimp2537
@megachimp2537 5 лет назад
It makes sense to me, considering that it is a very early self loading rifle and out of battery safeties are not nearly as relevant on manual repeating rifles. It is due to incident that out of battery safeties are pretty much universal today
@mazkact
@mazkact 5 лет назад
Touche Mon Friar.
@dj1NM3
@dj1NM3 5 лет назад
It is very easy to believe that it's obvious in retrospect, but if you're that guy making one of the first of a new type, then there are some things which only become obvious after an accident.
@Uryendel
@Uryendel 5 лет назад
It's not incorporate in the mauser 91 who can be shoot without the bolt locked, so that doesn't surprise me that much
@keenanmcbreen7073
@keenanmcbreen7073 5 лет назад
The cycling of the action is very aesthetically pleasing, very cool design.
@MisteriosGloriosos922
@MisteriosGloriosos922 2 года назад
Thanks for letting us know, good work!!!
@whatTheFup
@whatTheFup 5 лет назад
Nice, just been watching C&Rsenals videos on the Mauser 71, and saw a comment on one of them that he built one in rage that cost him his eye, good timeing
@yelocalwierdo2440
@yelocalwierdo2440 4 года назад
"its because of that goddamn rotary phone of his"
@worldtraveler930
@worldtraveler930 5 лет назад
And Now we know the origin of "Hay kid you'll shoot your eye out " 😉
@TorquilBletchleySmythe
@TorquilBletchleySmythe 5 лет назад
Wonderful action. I suspect a small modification to the firing pin mechanism would have negated the misfire issue. We're there any other problems with the flapper action? I don't see why this could not be developed for modern usage otherwise.
@justsomeamerican2301
@justsomeamerican2301 5 лет назад
"the last time i trusted someone i lost an eye"
@knutdergroe9757
@knutdergroe9757 5 лет назад
What a AWESOME, rifle(firearm development history) to see.... Growing up as a lover of Mauser firearms. That is just, AWESOME !
@SafetyProMalta
@SafetyProMalta 5 лет назад
Superb condition rifle and so solid looking.
@datsuna6585
@datsuna6585 5 лет назад
The gun that made paul mauser ARRRRRRRR
@cdn2201
@cdn2201 5 лет назад
What an amazing gun it's so impressive
@nicksande6880
@nicksande6880 5 лет назад
Paul Mausarrrrr Sorry, i'll see myself out xD Interesting rifle though^^
@Isaac-ho8gh
@Isaac-ho8gh 5 лет назад
Nice xD
@mr.xasiklas6584
@mr.xasiklas6584 5 лет назад
Im pretty sure Paul wont be able to see himself out
@b.griffin317
@b.griffin317 5 лет назад
its amazing that technology evolved so fast back then you could go from the mauaser '71 to this in less than 30 years.
@RyTrapp0
@RyTrapp0 5 лет назад
Meanwhile, the US military went from the M1 Garand to an inferior M1 Gara... I mean, the "M14"... in the same time frame
@MordredSimp
@MordredSimp 4 года назад
It seems like a fascinating rifle that has an interesting action, however it's hard to imagine it actually firing
@grimmig7098
@grimmig7098 5 лет назад
This rifle looks absolutely gorgeous.
@massimothetrog7111
@massimothetrog7111 8 месяцев назад
120+ years old and still beautiful.
@thelongslowgoodbye
@thelongslowgoodbye 5 лет назад
It's interesting how Mauser chose the 6x57mm cartridge which is similar to more modern cartridges like the 6.5mm Remington Magnum which was from the 1960's. It seems like Mauser was looking for a high performance rifle with a flatter shooting trajectory.
@Neuttah
@Neuttah 5 лет назад
It's not that the militaries of the times weren't thinking about it, it's just that shit kept coming up, and they _really_ didn't wanna have fork over the cash and effort required to change out their entire weapons stockpile just as a certain massive conflict seems likely.
@RyTrapp0
@RyTrapp0 5 лет назад
Don't forget that military doctrine & strategy of the day that drove the way that rifles were used on the battlefield is often what directly influenced choices like ammunition specs - and this typically gets left out of the "...how dumb were they to not know that an intermediate is the ONLY right choice in all of rifle history ever!!!" 20/20 discussions. A complete & utter lack of perspective of historical happenings typically leads contemporary humans to believe that the previous generations were a bunch of "dumb dumbs" that couldn't see the obvious, and that each and every person today is just oh so much smarter than their forefathers. The actual legitimate instances of militaries royally fucking up such choices as cartridge type/power - such as the good ol' red, white, n' blue NATO 7.62 - are actually few & far between(and often quickly corrected within pretty short order - ala NATO 5.56...). Go watch some C&Rsenal for thoroughly explained examples of military doctrine driving what many today just assume is a "dumb" choice(and, mind you, I'm not claiming that of anyone in here in particular). For example, volley fire accuracy, what with targets placed hundreds of yards down range almost PARALLEL to the ground(yea, NO SHIT! LOL), was a very standard & important test within rifle trials of the mid-late 1800s. And, mind you, volley fire was a necessary doctrine because of, 1) literal fog of war caused by old school black powder, and, 2) the utter lack of direct fire accuracy of so many of those early(yet at the time 'cutting edge') rifles. And of course, if volley fire is a critical military doctrine, then you're going to want a big, powerful round - such as .50 caliber, propelled by a truck load of black powder out of a big ol' 24" barrel. Obviously this wasn't quite THAT dramatic by the very late 1800s/early 1900s, but it certainly demonstrates the way that one or two variables can knock over the dominoes that lead to what today often appears to be the "wrong" choice. So, while one might say that Paul Mauser's choice of a very modern appearing intermediate cartridge was 'ahead of its time', another might say that it's nothing more than one of many reasons why his auto loading rifle wasn't adopted.
@razor1uk610
@razor1uk610 5 лет назад
Very true Ry, well pointed out & nicely paragraphed too.
@kaffykathy8729
@kaffykathy8729 5 лет назад
"You'll shoot your eye out, kid."
@matejmatej3554
@matejmatej3554 5 лет назад
It looks good how come it wasn't successful rifle? What did it flop? He should just make sure it wouldn't be able to shoot if it was not fully locked P.S support your favorite guns channels and try to post your comments on every video just to show RU-vid we matter and gun Community is strong
@Vincent-S
@Vincent-S 5 лет назад
It flopped when it popped and spooked Paul about the dangers and possibilies of out of battery detonations in self loaders. If that happened to me back then, I'd go "fuck that" and do what he did and drop the short recoil try and do everything I can to prevent any more cartridges from popping out of battery and save many a trooper's finger and eyes.
@wingracer1614
@wingracer1614 5 лет назад
Pop quiz. How many successful military rifles (rifles only, not pistols or heavy machine guns or what have you) can you name that were short recoil operated? Or flapper locked? There's your answer.
@Marc83Aus
@Marc83Aus 5 лет назад
The problem was a cartridge detonating before being fully locked into the chamber, I imagine after that accident Mouser basically shelved the entire rifle and went straight to designing one which couldn't possibly do that again.
@ericjohnson2024
@ericjohnson2024 5 лет назад
Gwer 43 and the Johnson Rifle.
@monkeymonk2278
@monkeymonk2278 3 года назад
Fascinating mechanical design.
@mcgavin098
@mcgavin098 2 года назад
I read somewhere that the accident was what made him design the large ring K98 with the beefed up action.
@paxwax1
@paxwax1 2 года назад
“Hey fireplace guy, how many one of a kind guns do you own?” FPG “Yes.”
@robertnrobretual2749
@robertnrobretual2749 5 лет назад
I didn't realize this was just put out today. I just watched the video on the sporter the other day.
@24kachina
@24kachina 5 лет назад
Interesting that the rear sight is located at the back of the receiver, providing a much longer sight radius than most military rifles of this era, perhaps one of the first to do so????? Beautiful piece of craftsmanship.
@DomoKuchikan
@DomoKuchikan 3 года назад
It sounds amazing when you cycle this rifle!
@Dread_Not
@Dread_Not 5 лет назад
Ian, when are you making a documentary about the Mauser family? I would love to have a historical analysis of the origins of the little machine shop in Oberndorf!
@shawn6723
@shawn6723 5 лет назад
as always, excellent video! but Ian, randomly could you toss the nostalgic into music back in! 😂
@philp.3978
@philp.3978 5 лет назад
Cool video. Thanks.
@Thrawnmulus
@Thrawnmulus 5 лет назад
That's a cool thing I never noticed before, flappers locks are really similar in operation to roller locks. Is there any benefit to flappers over rollers though?
@templatename2006
@templatename2006 4 года назад
Quite an eye opening system for a rifle
@MrScottylarue1
@MrScottylarue1 5 лет назад
Beautiful!!!
@zacht9447
@zacht9447 5 лет назад
This is a really cool gun hopefully we can get better ammo now that's less prone to detonations like that
@pillowsocket
@pillowsocket 5 лет назад
Off topic but I bought my 1st garand today, very happy.
@ulfedlund884
@ulfedlund884 5 лет назад
- now we talk perfection ... love it
@jamesvalentine2845
@jamesvalentine2845 5 лет назад
Beautiful rifle.
@PistolManiac100
@PistolManiac100 5 лет назад
Always interesting.
@yomaze2009
@yomaze2009 5 лет назад
What a cool design. Too bad it took an eye and a finger. As always Ian, really enjoyed my morning cup o weapons history!
@criffermaclennan
@criffermaclennan 5 лет назад
The engineering skill, the carpentry skill, outstanding craftsmanship
@VeraceSzK
@VeraceSzK 5 лет назад
Woah, that's really cool.
@WaveTheConqueror
@WaveTheConqueror 4 года назад
so, this is the german M1 Garand? didn't thought the entire comment section turned in to pun-master Barbara Dunkelman.
@andrewjacobson243
@andrewjacobson243 5 лет назад
Very cool. I’m always curious on the value of these ultra rare guns
@Blitz350
@Blitz350 5 лет назад
The craftsmanship is incredible. And on a prototype nonetheless!
@mickymcfarts5792
@mickymcfarts5792 5 лет назад
Effected his VIEW of rifle safety lol
@TheWilldrick
@TheWilldrick 5 лет назад
1:42 "...serious impact on Mauser's view(...)" The pun! it hurts!
@JohnSmith-xv2ob
@JohnSmith-xv2ob 5 лет назад
I knew you lived in Arizona but I didn't know you lived on Tucson! Ian you are like one of my idols, we gotta hit the range together! By the way, if you want to do a video on the SKS, I will lend you my SKS to do so.
@Alexx120493
@Alexx120493 5 лет назад
For a Prototype this things quality is insane. It looks better than some production rifles
@S44BBOI
@S44BBOI 5 лет назад
Germans.
@Don_Valentino
@Don_Valentino 5 лет назад
Mauser's daughter: built a new locking system? mr. Mauser : Yes Mauser's daughter: What did it cost? mr. Mauser : Everything (i could see with my left eye)
@bloodsnow00
@bloodsnow00 5 лет назад
Hey Ian I might have asked this before, but similar thing to the m47 Medusa that was......it was a thing, Have you seen, or used the chiappa x-caliber? Its a m6 survival type setup but you can order with it the barrel inserts, so it goes from 12 gauge over 22lr to whatever insert you put in the top barrel, and those inserts come in 357mag/38spl, 9mm, .380, 40 s&w, 44mag, 45 acp, 410/45LC and 20 gauge. If you have not seen or used one, I would love to see you do a video one it, preferably with range testing included. Id love to see what you think after hands on experience. Thanks.
@cg8212
@cg8212 5 лет назад
Does this remind anyone else of looking at a roller - delayed system in reverse a bit? With a little bit of reworking with that in mind, we might have a rifle here. Let's say inside the "barrel beach extension" the flappers, instead of adding a delay in a gas action like an H&K, act as a disconnector for a floating firing pin (think a 80 series 1911).
@dj1NM3
@dj1NM3 5 лет назад
Or, alternatively: have the barrel fixed in position and the bolt carrier with flap-wedge actuated by a gas-piston.
@samuelclayton4405
@samuelclayton4405 5 лет назад
Cool rifle man.
@p.cake7434
@p.cake7434 3 года назад
Pirate gun man
@bitfreakazoid
@bitfreakazoid 5 лет назад
"We have our front trunnion encasement." So it is written, so shall it be done.
@jacksonbacon2589
@jacksonbacon2589 5 лет назад
Good lord i want one of these... how much would a beauty like this cost?
@FakeGuthix01
@FakeGuthix01 5 лет назад
Hi Ian, could you consider showcasing a Nagant 1910 revolver? It was a prototype of the M1895 that was swing-out. Only a couple thousand were made but I'm sure you could get your hands on one. :D
@hschan5976
@hschan5976 5 лет назад
The rifle that turned Mauser into Wotan
@Nulrom
@Nulrom 5 лет назад
Can you please post the link of the video of the Mauser co2?
@MrKawabonga96
@MrKawabonga96 5 лет назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-w5F22ri_L5g.html
@morelenmir
@morelenmir 5 лет назад
That seems like it should be an *extremely* strong mechanism, better than many contemporary semi-automatic actions. Odd it should have failed so terribly, even if it was an exploding cartridge. Did the gun itself survive I wonder? Perhaps Mauser had it melted down!
@Godzilla691138MW3
@Godzilla691138MW3 5 лет назад
Yeah, I think I better start wearing eye protection from now on whenever I go shooting.
@trevillyan5515
@trevillyan5515 5 лет назад
Paul Mauser is my favorite cycloptic gun designer
@snarl3027
@snarl3027 5 лет назад
I’ll bet he had one hell of a flinch after that accident!
@Arditi1922
@Arditi1922 5 лет назад
Love your channel and all the work you do, but I feel lack of shooting this beauty's in your videos :/
@ENCHANTMEN_
@ENCHANTMEN_ 3 года назад
Losing an eye must have been especially hard on a gunsmith. I hope he learned to shoot with his other one.
@rasmuswellejus2809
@rasmuswellejus2809 5 лет назад
What a nice riffle!
@lubossoltes321
@lubossoltes321 5 лет назад
argh, no disassembly .... I was sooooo looking forward to it after seeing the title ...
@ADRay1999
@ADRay1999 5 лет назад
So Mauser became a cyclops.
@Papperlapappmaul
@Papperlapappmaul 5 лет назад
That's not how it works, I'm afraid.
@Raygun222
@Raygun222 5 лет назад
@@Papperlapappmaul That's exactly how it works.
@estebancinardi45
@estebancinardi45 5 лет назад
You mean pirate, don't you?
@ADRay1999
@ADRay1999 5 лет назад
Esteban Cinardi: whatever floats your boat
@AndrewSmith-cn3nw
@AndrewSmith-cn3nw 5 лет назад
@@ADRay1999 Floats your pirate ship, after shooting your eye out with a C98
@RyTrapp0
@RyTrapp0 5 лет назад
What I believe is the most incredible aspect of auto loader/semi-auto rifle design history & evolution is that, at the conceivable end/"ideal conclusion" of the concept(which is essentially the AR and, arguably, the AK platforms of today), the answer to the basic fundamentals was right in front of EVERYONE's face - an automation of the bolt action rifle. This is all that a modern rotating bolt gas operated rifle action is, it's a conventional box magazine fed bolt action(rotating bolt utilizing locking lugs with conventional extraction & ejection) that is operated by gas pressure instead of the human hand & arm - at its most basic fundamentals, it's nothing more than an automated bolt action, and no other system has yet proven superior. We essentially watched a half century of work on a specific type of machine just to see it come full circle. Now, with that said, perfection is boring, while imperfection is much more interesting - what we've become accustomed to naming "character" because many are seemingly uncomfortable admitting that they prefer the flawed rather than the flawless. Myself, while I LOVE the odd & unusual(AKA, the so horribly flawed that they're now considered "rare" today just because they were surpassed by the functionally superior opposition, like this rather spectacular Mauser), I absolutely ADORE the roller locks, what a beautiful mechanism! But, there's still a reason why repeating rifles ended up with rotating bolt actions, and not a manually operated roller locks(...but, HOW COOL!!!) - just as the auto-loaders also ended up with rotating bolt actions. Talk about "over thinking it" just a bit - only toolem' a half to two-thirds of a century to rediscover what the obvious(seriously, is there a manually operated mass produced rifle of the last 75 or so years that ISN'T a bolt action?)! And, all they had to do was go hunting...
@FartInhalerSlamPoetry
@FartInhalerSlamPoetry 5 лет назад
When a gun transcends the definition of firearm and become art.
@bobsenior9218
@bobsenior9218 5 лет назад
What an elegant simple action. Thank god the Germans didn't have this rifle for World War One. I enjoy your videos very much Ian and I was wondering have you done one on 6.5 by 55 Swedish calibre mausers . I have a model 96 and 98 in this calibre and was wondering what your thoughts on these rifles are. Thank you for your great videos.
@ticket2space
@ticket2space 3 месяца назад
Ians COLD 🤣 the rifle blew up in Mausers face, costing him an eye and Ian says "it had a serious impact that effected the way he looked at rifles"
@braedengriffiths4249
@braedengriffiths4249 5 лет назад
“It’s all shits and giggles till someone looses an eye...” - Paul Mauser
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