(1 customer review)

C Grade M95 Steyr Mannlicher Carbine, 8X50R without bolt

$99.99

49 in stock

49 in stock

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Description

C Grade M.95 Steyr Mannlicher Carbine Cal. 8x50R without bolt

The M.95 rifles are in overall poor to fair condition. These C Grade carbines may have or may not have handmade stock replacements, can have some wood cracks such as at the wrist or near the toe of the stock, possibly some missing rear sight components, etc.  May have some missing trigger components and may require some replacement parts to be fully functional. All of these carbines use the 8x50R ammunition. The metal condition is generally poor to fair and may have surface pitting. May be small metal parts such as a missing stacking rod, extractor, sling swivel, barrel band and/or screw.  May be missing the upper handguard. Does not come with clip, we have them available for sale separately.

The bolt is not included.

Bores range from poor to good. Please remember that these guns are 100+ years old and back then there were no “non Corrosive” primers available.

C&R or FFL required. 

If you would like to see an in depth restoration of one of our B Grade M.95 Steyr Mannlicher Carbines, check out this video from Surplus Restoration on YouTube!

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1 review for C Grade M95 Steyr Mannlicher Carbine, 8X50R without bolt

  1. Nathan Michaud

    Got one of these in lieu of a “cut down” and I’m pretty happy. Fugly and filthy no finish but I don’t care, has solid stock except a couple easily fixed gouges, no cracks even upper hand guard intact, complete save for the front swivel (readily substituted for an 1891 Mauser swivel) and the sight slider (being a factory converted long rifle still had the schritten measurements so not a big dea for the range as the ladder on the lowest elevation is still way too high). Bore is ok, dark / frosted but no pitting and still has clear rifling, plus the outer grooves at muzzle don’t swallow a .329 projectile, so definitely shootable. Lastly it’s kind of an oddball conversion, definitely factory as the banded front sight is clearly pressed back on straight, but slightly shorter than a normal carbine – 18.25 inches to muzzle to receiver (19” on the nose if measured in bore to breech face) and 1” shorter overall than my Bulgarian refers at exactly 38.5” with 2.5” between the barrel bands, front band is set slightly further back than a standard carbine so a normal 95 bayonet doesn’t quite lock in, the lug itself looks slightly shortened perhaps modified for a different bayonet? I’ve seen a couple other people on forums with nearly identical specs save for an obvious replacement ladder sight so some speculation that they were WW1 capture or reparations modified by Italy for colonial use. Handy and neat little carbine, definitely worth replacing the barrel or reaming out to .410 if it proves to be worn out after the first range trip.

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