Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates

  1. Mauser Model Hsc 32
  2. Interarms Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates
  3. Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates Interarms
  4. Mauser Pistol Serial Number Lookup

Mauser HSc

HSc VAR#4 NAZI ARMY ISSUE - C31460. 32 ACP; 75% blue, very good bore, very good grips, 3.4' barrel, The metal finish has muzzle and high edge wear, and lite thinning The left slide is stamped MAUSER BANNER MAUSER WERK A.G. OBERNDORF An / MOD HSc KAL 7.65 m/m It has an EAGLE/WaA 135. 1914 model, this variation was manufactured between 1913 to 1914 with a serial number range between 2801 to13500. This variation will be found with a 2 line slide marking. 1910/14 model, this variation was manufactured between 1914 to 1921 with a serial number range between 61000 to 221800. This variation has no latch in the side plate and will be found with 9 slide serrations on each side of the slide. Mauser HSc German WWII production of the HSc ended in May 1945. The French military occupied the Mauser Werke in Oberndorf shortly thereafter and continued production of the HSc for their military. The highest recorded German serial number to date is 951927, and the lowest reported French production is 952002. My great uncle gave me this mauser HSc as a graduation present and im trying to figure out more information about this model and the date of manufacture. Its in.32 caliber and is in very good overall condition the serial number is 7774xx. He also gave me an American holster with it but i cant find any information about it. W hen Walther introduced its svelte Polizeipistole (PP) and Polizeipistole Kriminalmodell (PPK) double-action pocket pistols in 1929 and 1930, Mauser realized that it might be a good idea to think.

Hsc
Mauser HSc
Type Semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin Nazi Germany
Service history
In service 1940–1945
Used by Nazi Germany
France
Wars World War II, First Indochina War
Production history
Designer Alex Seidel
Designed 1935–36
Manufacturer Mauser
Produced 1940–1977
Number built Over 334,000[1]
Variants HSc Super
Specifications
Weight 700 g (25 oz) unloaded
Length 152 mm (6.0 in)
Barrel length 86 mm (3.4 in)
Cartridge.32 ACP (7.65x17mm Browning SR)
.380 ACP (9x17mm Short)
ActionBlowback
Feed system 8-round box magazine (.32 ACP)
7-round magazine (.380 ACP)
Sights Fixed iron sights

The Mauser HSc is a 7.65mm pistol made in Nazi Germany during World War II and post-war. The designation HSc stood for Hahn Selbstspanner ('self-cocking hammer') Pistole, third and final design 'C'. Production was continued in 1945–46 during the French occupation and, later, from 1968 to 1977 by Mauser. It features a semi-exposed hammer, double-action trigger, single-column magazine, and a spring surrounding the barrel.

The Mauser HSc was originally intended as a commercial pistol. It competed with the contemporary German Walther PPK and PP and Sauer 38H for police and military use. It was procured initially by the navy (Kriegsmarine) soon followed by the Army and police. HSc pistols used by the Luftwaffe or Waffen-SS were procured from Army and police stocks.

Production

Production began in late 1940 at serial number 700,000, as an extension of the serial number range of the Mauser Model 1934 pistol, a much more difficult pistol to manufacture. The early pistols have well-made wooden grips, and are highly polished and richly blued. The first 1350 pistols were made for the commercial market and, because of the low positioning of the grip screws, have become known as the 'Low Grip Screw' variety. Approximately half of this initial production was purchased by Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine. All these early low grip pistols are today very rare. At approximately serial number 701345 the grip screws were relocated upward to a more central and sturdier position.

Mauser

The German Army began HSc procurement with an initial order for 3,000 pistols in early 1941, beginning with serial number 701,345, and, intermittently, ending about #712,000. These pistols are marked with an Eagle/655 inspection stamp on the left rear trigger guard web, a factory firing proof Eagle/N on the right rear trigger guard web and at the front of the right slide. Also a small Army Test Proof stamp was stamped on the left rear grip tang. Subsequent orders were placed by the Army throughout the war, along with pistols procured by the Police and Kriegsmarine, with almost 24% of the total production of 252,000 pistols going to the commercial market.

Mauser Model Hsc 32

A second Army variation of about 5,000 pistols consisted of pistols whose serial numbers ranged, intermittently, from about 712,000 to about 745,000. These have an Eagle/655 WaA (Army acceptance) on the left rear trigger guard web and the Eagle/N firing proofs on the right rear trigger guard web and on front of right slide, but have no proof mark on the left rear grip tang. The finish on these pistols is also of the first quality.

Mauser hsc serial numbers chart

The third Army variation of some 4,000 pistols ranged in intermittent serial numbers from about 745,000 to about 790,000. These bear an acceptance mark of Eagle/135 on the left rear trigger guard web and the two Eagle/N firing proofs on the right side. The high quality finish of the earlier pistols starts to decline in this production segment.

The fourth variation consists of 31,000 intermittently numbered pistols from around #790,000 to #886,000. These pistols have an Eagle/135 acceptance and Eagle/N proofs as before. On pistols after #855,000 the left side of the slide now has a three-line device stamped along with the Banner. The polish of these pistols is rougher and the military 'dusk blue' is now in evidence. The cross hatched machining inside the top sight channel is no longer there.

The last variation, of some 32,000 intermittently numbered pistols in a serial number range of about #886,000 to #952,000, has the three-line device on the left side of the slide and bears an Eagle/WaA135 acceptance and the Eagle/N proofs. Beginning in the late #940,000 range some pistols were given black plastic grip panels. The very last pistols, in the #949,500 to #952,000 range, were finished with Mauser's phosphate finish, somewhat similar to the U.S. parkerizing finish used on most M-1 rifles, M-1 Carbines and M1911 pistols. The Mauser phosphate finish is variable in color, from a dark grey to an almost green color. These phosphated pistols are quite rare today and, with Eagle/WaA135 acceptance, are highly desirable to military collectors. Interestingly, the Eagle/WaA135 marks are generally 'right side up' on the early phosphate pistols but 'upside down' on the later pistols. Small parts on many of these very late phosphate pistols are usually a mix of older blued parts and later phosphated parts. HScs with frames and slides of different finishes may exist and would be extremely rare and desirable to military collectors.

Final German World War II production ended with the capture of the Oberndorf area by American troops in late April 1945. After the area was given to the French production resumed for French use and was concluded in 1946.

Military personnel of all ranks not issued sidearms often purchased HSc pistols in the commercial marketplace and carried them in the field. Such commercial pistols often returned with veterans as World War II war souvenirs, often in military proofed HSc holsters.

Distribution of total HSc pistol production (1940–1945):

  • Army (Heer): 137,121 (54.4%)
  • Navy (Kriegsmarine): 27,100 (10.8%)
  • Police (Polizei): 28,300 (11.2%)
  • Commercial (Civil): 59,467 (23.6%)
  • Total: 251,988 (100.0%)

The HSc pistols made by the French in 1945–46 bear an RW proof. Most of these pistols were destined for French forces fighting in the First Indochina War.

Production of high-quality commercial pistols was resumed at the Mauser factory in Oberndorf from 1968 to 1977. These were issued to certain German police units and exported mainly to the North American commercial market. They were available in both blued and nickel finishes.

The pistol originally chambered the 7.65 mm (.32 ACP) cartridge, but the majority of Mauser HScs manufactured in the 1970s were chambered in 9mm Kurz (.380 ACP).

Dates

The full serial number of each pistol is located on the front of the grip frame, just above the magazine. The last three digits of that serial number are located on the bottom of the chamber (stamped) and the flat panel of the slide just under the muzzle (electropenciled).

References

  1. ^[Category:All articles with dead external links] Mauser HSc Production History]
  • The Mauser HSc Pistol, Burnham and Theodore, 2008,
  • Mauser Pistolen, Weaver, Speed and Schmid, 2008
  • Axis Pistols in World War II, Jan C. Still, 1989
  • Mauser Pocket Pistols, Roy G. Pender, 1971
  • German Pistols and Holsters 1934-1945, Maj. Robert Whittington 1969

External links

  • Mauser HSc at guns.ru
  • Mauser HSc history at www.mauserguns.com
  • Mauser HSc on GunsTribune

Interarms Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates

Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates

Mauser Hsc Serial Number Dates Interarms

German firearms and light weapons of World War II
Side arms (Pistolen)
  • Mauser HSc
Rifles and carbines (Gewehre und Karabiner)
Submachine guns (Maschinenpistolen)
Machine guns and other larger weapons
Mortars (Granatwerfer)
Grenades (Granaten)
Notable foreign-made infantry weapons
  • Browning Hi-Poweras P640(b)
  • Radom wz. 35 Visas P645(p)
  • ZB vz. 24as G24(t)
  • ZB vz. 33as G33/40(t)
  • ZB vz. 26as MG26(t)
  • Kb ppanc wz.35as Panzerbüchse 35(p)
German-made cartridges used by the Wehrmacht
  • 7.92×94mm
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Mauser Pistol Serial Number Lookup

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