24 April 2008, 18:33
RojelioFN Deluxe Mauser
When were the 1948 version FN deluxe mausers discontinued in favor of the supreme. This is the version with a military floorplate and trigger and flag safety on the left side of the shroud and full C ring.
The supreme was made into the early 70's according to Ludwig Olson, but, he doesn't indicate how long the Deluxe was made.
Thanks, Rojelio
I believe 48 or 49 was when production ended and they shifted to the "H" ring. Although a friend has one of the commercial models, sans thumbcut, with a full "C" ring. Go figure.
24 April 2008, 20:08
fla3006The Supreme was introduced in 1957. Production overlapped with the Deluxe which was discontinued in 1964. The Supreme was dropped in 1975. All had "H" rings after 1948.
quote:
Originally posted by fla3006:
The Supreme was introduced in 1957. Production overlapped with the Deluxe which was discontinued in 1964. The Supreme was dropped in 1975. All had "H" rings after 1948.
Sorry, I was focused on the "C" ring vs "H" ring question not the model.
25 April 2008, 01:35
RojelioThanks guys,
Were there any H ring models with the military floorplate and trigger?
Rojelio
25 April 2008, 02:33
<slancey>I have 2 FN Mausers that have the H Ring and both had push-button floorplates, similar to the military style, and single stage triggers. They are in the 42,000-43,000 serial number range.
They are now full custom guns with Blackburn bottom metal and triggers.
25 April 2008, 09:31
jstevensI have two with serials under 2000,and they both are H-ring actions. They also have the push button floorplate.
27 April 2008, 20:38
sierra2Here's another FN Deluxe action, but by SAKO and factory chambered for the 8x60mm, i.e., the 0.318 version. Push button magazine, safety flag, "H", 3xxx serial #, and a slightly fatter stock than the FN Mauser of the same vintage. I'd love to know the actual date of this rifle, just to date when someone in the post WWII era was still making a 0.318 bore 8mm!!
LLS
27 April 2008, 20:53
fla3006Sako made those rifles from 1950-1957. I have no idea why they used the 0.318" bore for the 8x60. Probably utilized surplus prewar military barrels.