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Mannlicher M1894

Mannlicher M1894
1894 mannlicher6.sized.jpg
Type Semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin Austria-Hungary
Production history
Designer Ferdinand Mannlicher
Manufacturer Fabrique D'Armes de Neuhaussen, Dreyse
Produced 1894–?
No. built less than 200
Specifications
Cartridge 6.5×23mmR
7.6×24mmR
Action Blow-forward
Muzzle velocity 1070 ft/s (326 m/s)
Feed system 5-round stripper clip into magazine
Sights Iron sights
External video
Mannlicher M1894 closer look

The Mannlicher M1894 was an early blow-forward semi-automatic pistol.

The earliest Ferdinand Mannlicher pistol, manufactured by Fabrique D'Armes de Neuhausen, Switzerland, was designed to be self-loading and to use a special rimmed cartridge in 6.5 mm caliber. The design represented an entirely new utilization of mechanical principles in automatic action called "blow-forward action". In the standard type of automatic action for low-powered cartridges, the recoil (or blow-back) is utilized to drive back a movable breech face or block, but Mannlicher utilized the principle of a rigid standing breech with the barrel blowing forward to extract, eject, and prepare for reloading.

A special barrel housing which carries the sight covers the entire length of the barrel (6.49 in/165 mm) when the arm is closed. A heavy recoil spring is mounted concentrically around the barrel within this housing and is compressed between a shoulder at the forward end of the casing and a shoulder at the rear of the barrel.

An unusual element in this design is a three-armed "barrel-holding lever". It is pivoted above the trigger as shown in the drawing from page 188, Mannlicher Rifles and Pistols, Smith, 1947. Its bottom arm engages with the trigger. The forward arm holds the barrel forward for loading. The rear arm serves as a hammer catch.

To load this weapon the hammer is cocked. As the hammer rotates on its axis pin, it acts upon the trigger, and the sear snaps into the cocking notch, holding the hammer. The hammer axis pin also supports the center arm of the barrel holding lever, which arm emerges and is raised high enough by its spring to press into a slot under the barrel. The rising thumbpiece on top of the barrel over the breech is then pushed forward. The barrel moves forward until its muzzle emerges from the barrel housing, compressing the recoil spring. The barrel holding lever is snapped into the locking notch in the underside of the barrel, thereby holding it in forward position for charging as shown in the drawing from Mannlicher Rifles and Pistols, Smith, 1947, page 189.


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