My Mauser built WWII P-38
Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2012 11:19 pm
The P-38 has a long association with the Indy movies. It was used by various Germans in "Raiders" (even though it wouldn't have been around yet) and it's the pistol Indy used to shoot through three Germans in "Last Crusade."
The P38 is a double action 9mm with an 8 round mag specifically designed to be easier and cheaper to produce then the Luger P08. It never completely replaced the Luger in German service.
Here's my WWII P-38 I picked up from FGS Sales a few years ago. IIRC, I paid $389 for the pistol and $25 for a second mag (should have got one more).
This is one of the "Russian capture" pistols sold off as surplus over the last decade. When you capture entire Army Groups you don't just capture firearms in onesies - twosies as a couple guys in a foxhole raise their hands: At that scale you also capture supply depots and warehouses. Some of these pistols were near new when captured.
The Soviets dip blued them all and then stuck them in long term storage. They came on the market about 8 or 10 years ago now. The initial batch dried up, but SOG has some now, although at a higher cost and not as nice a condition.
Mine is marked "BYF 43" meaning it was built by Mauser in 1943. The mags are also Mauser made. All the parts, including the locking block, are serial numbered to the gun. (The mags are unnumbered).
The gun functions great with most ammo, but won't reliably feed if the OAL is too short. I've found the newer 9mm Federal ammo from Wal Mart is shorter than the Winchester White Box stuff and the only way I can get it to feed the first round is to lock the slide back and use the slide release to chamber a round. It works fine with WWB and all other 9mm FMJ I've fired with it though.
I find the P-38 sights easier to see and use then the sights on a actual WWII 1911A1 or most other handguns of that era. The DA trigger is a little heavy, but reasonably smooth, and the SA trigger is actually pretty nice.
As you can see from the target it will put them all in the kill zone at 25 yards. I have plenty of modern handguns, so this one will only ever see range use. It's a nice piece of history and fills a spot both in my WWII collection and my Indy guns collection.
The P38 is a double action 9mm with an 8 round mag specifically designed to be easier and cheaper to produce then the Luger P08. It never completely replaced the Luger in German service.
Here's my WWII P-38 I picked up from FGS Sales a few years ago. IIRC, I paid $389 for the pistol and $25 for a second mag (should have got one more).
This is one of the "Russian capture" pistols sold off as surplus over the last decade. When you capture entire Army Groups you don't just capture firearms in onesies - twosies as a couple guys in a foxhole raise their hands: At that scale you also capture supply depots and warehouses. Some of these pistols were near new when captured.
The Soviets dip blued them all and then stuck them in long term storage. They came on the market about 8 or 10 years ago now. The initial batch dried up, but SOG has some now, although at a higher cost and not as nice a condition.
Mine is marked "BYF 43" meaning it was built by Mauser in 1943. The mags are also Mauser made. All the parts, including the locking block, are serial numbered to the gun. (The mags are unnumbered).
The gun functions great with most ammo, but won't reliably feed if the OAL is too short. I've found the newer 9mm Federal ammo from Wal Mart is shorter than the Winchester White Box stuff and the only way I can get it to feed the first round is to lock the slide back and use the slide release to chamber a round. It works fine with WWB and all other 9mm FMJ I've fired with it though.
I find the P-38 sights easier to see and use then the sights on a actual WWII 1911A1 or most other handguns of that era. The DA trigger is a little heavy, but reasonably smooth, and the SA trigger is actually pretty nice.
As you can see from the target it will put them all in the kill zone at 25 yards. I have plenty of modern handguns, so this one will only ever see range use. It's a nice piece of history and fills a spot both in my WWII collection and my Indy guns collection.