my profile |
register |
faq |
search upload photo | donate | calendar |
03-20-2022, 05:57 PM | #1 |
Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: PORT ST LUCIE, FLORIDA
Posts: 12,216
Thanks: 6,209
Thanked 4,133 Times in 2,173 Posts
|
Did They Run Out Of Walnut!
Or another reason?
|
03-20-2022, 08:52 PM | #2 |
Lifetime Forum
Patron Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Fairbanks, Alaska. Home of the best moose.
Posts: 659
Thanks: 365
Thanked 1,178 Times in 394 Posts
|
It's easier, cheaper and faster to mold bakelite or plastic, than to carve, checker and fit a piece of wood. And P-38 grips are somewhat fragile around the curved back edge if they are made out of wood.
|
The following 6 members says Thank You to gunbugs for your post: |
03-20-2022, 09:27 PM | #3 |
Twice a Lifer
Lifetime Forum Patron Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Atop the highest hill in Schuyler County NY
Posts: 3,347
Thanks: 7,285
Thanked 2,579 Times in 1,366 Posts
|
What Doug says...
They definitely tended to run out of walnut during the frenzy of wartime production, evidenced by beech-wood grips of late WWI. The guys who checkered wooden grips at the factory could certainly fly! I saw a film clip from a link once posted here, of a Mauser tech doing it. He seemed to be using a 5-line (or more) cutter and zoomed across the grip! Scraps from making K98 stocks provided much of the material, IIRC.
__________________
"... Liberty is the seed and soil, the air and light, the dew and rain of progress, love and joy."-- Robert Greene Ingersoll 1894 |
The following member says Thank You to ithacaartist for your post: |
03-20-2022, 09:47 PM | #4 |
User
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Virginia, part of the occupied Confederacy
Posts: 299
Thanks: 15
Thanked 33 Times in 24 Posts
|
I have heard that Mauser used Walnut and Beech “leftover” pieces from rifle stocks as the primary source of wood for Luger grips. By1941, most rifles were being stocked with laminate material. Hence less wood for grips.
The P38 pistols primarily had plastic grips from day one. They used wood filler (sawdust) later in the war to stretch the plastic resin. |
The following 3 members says Thank You to snipershot1944 for your post: |
|
|