Premium Only Content

Mannlicher M1893 🇦🇹 Exploring a Classic Rifle
Mannlicher M1893 bolt action rifle
Mannlicher M1893 rifle was designed by famous Austrian gun designer Ferdinand von Mannlicher who worked at the Osterreichishe Waffenfabrik-Gesellschaft (OWG) factory, in the city of Steyr. In 1893 this rifle was adopted by Romania, and all production has been carried out by OWG. During WW1, a number of Mannlicher M1893 rifles that were still in OWG warehouses were taken into Austrian service, in its original 6.5x53R chambering or converted to Austria’s own 8x50R ammunition.
In 1895 the same rifle with minor modifications was also adopted by Netherlands as Geweer M. 95. Until about 1902, Dutch contract Mannlicher M1895 rifles were produced by Steyr factory. After that, M1895 rifles and carbines were produced by Hemburg arsenal in Netherlands. Production there lasted until 1940. One peculiar feature of Dutch Mannlicher M.95 carbines was that there were way too many (probably more than a dozen) minor variations issued to different branches or services, such as cavalry, engineers, artillery, Navy, colonial troops etc.
Mannlicher M1893 / M1895 rifle is manually operated, rotary bolt action weapon. Its bolt is based on modified German Gew.88 design, with dual locking lugs at the front of the bolt body and a detachable bolt head. Fixed magazine, designed by Mannlicher, is loaded using 5-round en-block clips that fit into the magazine and remain there with the ammunition in it. Once all ammunition from magazine is expended, empty clip automatically falls down and out of the magazine, through the opening in the magazine base. M1893 and m1895 Mannlicher clips were of ‘symmetrical’ design, with no designated ‘top’ or ‘bottom’ sizes. Receiver has split rear bridge to allow passage of the bolt handle, conveniently located at the middle of the bolt.
Romanian and Dutch rifles are mechanically similar and have minor differences in the barrel lengths (Dutch rifle is slightly longer at 1295 mm overall, its barrel is 788 mm long), rear sight shape, wood and other minute details. Dutch carbines were available with many variations of stocks, fittings and sling loops. Ammunition and clips were interchangeable between all 6.5mm Mannlicher rifles and carbines of this basic design.
-
2:22
World Of Weapons
1 year agoS&T Motiv K12 🇰🇷 Forging the Path to Excellence. The Power and Precision of South Korea
832 -
1:33:51
Steve-O's Wild Ride! Podcast
1 day agoJohn C. Reilly's Surprising Connection To Jackass (And Beef With Weeman!)
7193 -
LIVE
StoneMountain64
1 hour agoBattlefield 6 News and Extraction Gaming
105 watching -
2:13:30
Side Scrollers Podcast
4 hours agoUK Introduces MANDATORY Digital ID + Dallas ICE Shooting BLAMED on Gaming + More | Side Scrollers
50.9K3 -
1:54:17
The Charlie Kirk Show
3 hours agoCharlie's Last Trip + What's Next + AMA | Erika Kirk, Mikey McCoy | 9.26.2025
200K179 -
1:02:53
The Quartering
2 hours agoMAGA Kid Kidnapped, Hasan Piker Meltdown, Vivek Fights For Alex Jones & More
89.8K29 -
32:49
Simply Bitcoin
1 day ago $0.88 earnedBitcoin Crucible w/ Alex Stanczyk | EP 1
8.13K -
1:57:37
Tucker Carlson
2 hours agoCharlie Sheen’s Craziest Hollywood Stories and Why He Refuses to Believe the Official Story of 9/11
24.6K37 -
1:33:12
Sean Unpaved
3 hours agoRyder Cup Tee-Off, CFB's Week 5 Madness, & the NFL's Win-or-Wilt Week 4
17K1 -
2:07:01
The Culture War with Tim Pool
4 hours agoWho Really Killed Charlie Kirk? Truth Behind Kirk Assassination | The Culture War with Tim Pool
216K205