Wänzl rifle
TypeBreech-loading rifle
Place of originAustrian Empire
Service history
In service1867–1918
Used byAustrian Empire
Qing Empire
Kingdom of Dahomey[1]
WarsHerzegovina Uprising (1882)
Boxer Rebellion
Balkan Wars
World War I (rear echelon troops)
Production history
DesignerFranz Wänzel
No. built70,000
VariantsWänzel Infanterie Gewehr M1854/67
Wänzel Infanterie Gewehr M1862/67
Wänzel JägerStutzen M1854/67
Wänzel JägerStutzen M1862/67
Wänzel Extra-Corps Gewehr M1854/67
Wänzel Extra-Corps Gewehr M1862/67
Wänzel WallGewehr M1872
Specifications
Length41.4 in (1,050 mm) to 52.6 in (1,340 mm)

Cartridge14×33mmR rimfire and centerfire
ActionFront-hinged trapdoor
Feed systemSingle-shot
Various Wänzl rifles

The Wänzl or Wänzel rifle was a breechloading conversion of the Lorenz M1854 and M1862 rifles. The Austro-Hungarian Empire used the Wänzel as their service rifle until they had enough Werndl-Holub M1867 rifles to arm the military.[2][3]

The rifle was a lifting block breechloader chambered for the 14×33mm Wänzel rimfire cartridge. The Austrians converted a total of 70,000 Lorenz muskets to Wänzels.

See also

References

  1. Kea, R. A. “Firearms and Warfare on the Gold and Slave Coasts from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries.” The Journal of African History, vol. 12, no. 2, 1971, pp. 185–213. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/180879. Accessed 2 Jan. 2024
  2. Никола Гажевић, Војна енциклопедија 7, Војноиздавачки завод, Београд (1974), стр. 548-550
  3. Никола Гажевић, Војна енциклопедија 10, Војноиздавачки завод, Београд (1976), стр. 676-679

Sources


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