Most helpful client reviews
12 of 12 humans found the following review helpful.
A Good Book for the Beginning Collector
By J. Mangrum
If you have looked for any printed material on your K-31 you have found that the landscape is finelooking barren. That was until North Cape Publications rolled out the elaborate collectors' guide by Joe Poyer called For Collector's Only: Swiss Magazine Loading Rifles, 1869 to 1958. I have looked for other available books (printed in English) on the same subject and have not found any to date.
Following the established "For Collector's Only" format and systematic approach of presenting selective information on gathering firearms, Joe's new book includes history of the development as well as a detailed, part-by-part analysis of the widely known and esteemed rifles and carbines. The book covers Friedich Vetterli's design of one of the very the introductory military bolt action repeaters and the original designs of Rudolf Schmidt's (Eduard Rubin actually designed the cartridge) straight-pull action rifles and carbines.
Presents broad info for detail cartouche and marking identification so you will be competent to answer the "when and where your rifle or carbine was made" questions you may have.
A good book for the beginning aggregator of Swiss rifles and carbines.
6 of 7 humans found the following review helpful.
Joe Poyer's book on Swiss magazine rifles
By Bill
Very good book, even taking into account the lack of published material (in English) on these rifles. Incorporates most of the data available from respective web internet sites and manuals on the straight-pull rifles, ammo, and bayonets. Only criticism I have is that I personally feel it would have been better coordinated by rifle model rather of being coordinated by the respective elements, ie: all stocks, all receivers, etc.
5 of 6 persons found the following review helpful.
The Best and Only Book on Swiss Repeating Rifles
By John M. Lane
Switzerland didn't fight in either of the world wars which scarred the 20th century and shaped much of the world we recognise today. Its tiny size size contributes to the impression I employed to have that Switzerland was interesting principally because of it is magnificent chocolate, beauteous ski resorts and HEIDI.
I would not have guessed that the Swiss played such a leading role in the development of little arms, but Joe Poyer's book, SWISS MAGAZINE LOADING RIFLES 1869-1958, proved to be an effective wake-up call for me. I do not forget spotting an odd looking carbine at a gun store in a nearby city and in the end finding a picture of it in Smith and Smith's SMALL ARMS OF THE WORLD.
It wasn't a Carcano like the store thought it was. It was a Swiss M 1893 carbine chambered for the GP 1890 7.5 X 53.5 mm cartridge and the design was borrowed from the Austrian 1888/90 carbine. Smith and Smith had only a line or two on this carbine and only a brief, but helpful summary of other Swiss rifles. There wasn't anything else (in English, at least) on Swiss rifles.
Gradually, I assembled more of them including an assortment of Schmidt rifles, an 89/96, an M-11, an M-11 carbine (the so-called "Engineer's carbine)and an potpourri of K-31s. All of them are beautifully constructed, well marked and accurate. The only exception is the M-93 carbine which I don't shoot due to a crack in the wrist of the stock.
North Cape Publishers' splendid FOR COLLECTORS ONLY ultimately gave me a great reference for these rifles. I receive pleasure from them a lot more now that I may read up on them.
Poyer also gives us galore interesting history. Switzerland was the firstborn country to adopt a bolt-action repeating rifle, the .41 caliber Vetterli with an 11 round tubular magazine. The Swiss did this on January 8, 1869, at a time when the US was still making the transition to it is initial breech loader, the .50 caliber Allin which was a single shot conversion of the .58 caliber muzzle-loading Springfield which equipped most Union forces for the duration of the Civil War.
Most US forces still carried the Allin, or "Trapdoor Springfield" for the duration of the Spanish American War in 1898, nine years after the Swiss had moved to the more advanced, M-89 Schmidt rifle which fired 7.5 mm smokeless rounds and from a 12 round magazine. Those US soldiers lucky sufficient to have a .30-40 Krag found themselves facing Imperial Spanish infantrymen armed with 7 mm Mauser repeaters which proved to be more than a match for the assortment of Allins and Krags available to US personnel. Rifles like the Mauser and the fast-firing M-89 Schmidt illustrated how much the US had fallen behind in the arms race.
I like this book and have used it a lot. It has a heap of good amount of time photographs, line drawings, and a number of utile graphs and charts including illustrations of gunmarks. There is also a glossary.
The only thing I may see which would make this book more utile to collectors and shooters is an index to facilitate quick reference. Hopefully, that will be included in future editions.
If you are fascinated in Swiss firearms or Swiss history, you'll receive pleasure from this book.
See all 11 client reviews...
|