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I found this lists, first are bolt action rifles;19 70191 460194 820199999999999999999999999999999959 500700And the second are shotguns;111111111111111111111111111111122222222222222222222. First, thanks very much for the super serial/production date list in this Thread!Yet, wondering whether any known, unaccounted, omissions? Particularly in respect of the early postwar Model 640, FN mauser 98 rifle, 'Husqvarna' marked actions, 8mm chambering. These actions reflecting newer solid left receiver wall as well as vestigial stripper clip receiver bridge 'hump' with unfinished clip slot. Apparently attributed to '48-8 production era, 50K+ serial range.Thanks for any information/opinon!

Apr 09, 2012  In this video we will be teaching you how to read your chainsaw bar information to help you better order chainsaw parts and more. The B&S engine was manufactured in mid 2007 and the machine serial number indicates the same time frame. This machine serial number group is the latest of the Tiger Cub models. Now that the Tiger Cub has been changed to Tiger Cat, the serial number groups have changed to reflect this change.

I emailed shotguns.se. Tobias is not willing to spend the time and money to recreate 'skydevabben' but he will ask the owner, when and if he sees him, if the site, or data, is for sale. Gunboards might be the ideal choice for host if that looks promising, and I might be willing to make a reasonable donation.

Apparently the book it was based on was 1 of 300 copies published in Swedish when the factory closed down in 1977, I think. Gotavapen is aimed at military arms and is not interested.Can you imagine it took this 'disaster' to bring me back to Gunboards. I have been busy focusing on archery, and mentor a University archery club.

I shoot an Assyrian horse bow by Csaba Grozer and use the thumb draw.

Here is a pic or two of one. Need to know what you have in areas. This one was made by Husqvarna for the Danish Contract.

These started to be built in late 1946 and were delivered in 1947. Possibly into very early 1948. The Crown is a Danish Crown.(((http://s714.photobucket.com/user/stevan12/media/Lahti%20M40/1002368zps631795d1.jpg.html). Your hunch was right. It has a D letter prefix and the HV crown on the receiver and the holster. So that make sit a Danish Polish pistol?

It looks just like yours. Does that make this pistol post 1945 then?No, no, no! Nothing to do with Poland!

It was built to order from Husqvarna by the Danish. Yes, post 45. The Danes ordered these just before the war ended in Europe. They were to go to their Police and Security Forces they had to assemble quickly. Built in 1946 and delivered primarily in 1late 1946 and into 1947. SN started at about 5001 and ended some where just over 15,000. Here is a little reading up for you to do.http://www.forgottenweapons.com/the-husqvarna-m-40-pistol/http://www.gotavapen.se/gota/m40/pist401.htm.

Bumping old thread thread for some info.Trying is get info on my lower serial number m40. I think army issue but what year about? This is my first one, looked at forgotten weapons article and gotavapen to bring me up to speed. Any info is much appreciated from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk.

Hard to really tell when it was made. However, your configuration of the m/40 only showed up in the Army Infantry Instruction Manual in 1944. Page 54.In 1944 1000 regular Swedish pistols were given to the Danish Brigade training there from 1944 until May of 1945. Those pistols went to Denmark when the Brigade was deployed there in May 1945. They had normal Swedish stamps.I am pretty sure you have one of those.

Denmark ended up selling off all m/40 pistols for export and many came here.My research has found that supposedly Sweden destroyed and melted down their own entire Army stocks of these and did not export any. This info is also in gotavapen.

You must have missed this info there. In addition, I would not use ANY +P in that pistol. They are not designed for it. If yours is what I think it is, use regular 9mm ammo. If not, your slide will eventually crack and I don't think you would find another one most likely.However, I do see that yours was refurbished in a Military Workshop.

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Yes, Denmark had those also. Modeled after the Swedish system.' At the rear end of the grip high up there might be two marks after a mandrel. This indicates that the pistol has been refurbished at a Military service station. Maybe the slide was changed or the barrel.

This type of twin mark appears on both pistols m/40 and m/07.' Yours shows two of these dots.Sooo, the slide may well be made of post war stronger steel.My pistol is balanced very well and is far more accurate than any of my other modern 9mm pistols. With my age, I am not as accurate as I was 20 years ago with any pistol. Except, for this one. My barrel has smears that indicate corrosive ammo was used in it. But no effect on accuracy.

Thanks for the reply stevan. I did see that they were melted down on gotavapen. What I read on there about the serials though is why I posted on here. Gotavapen doesn't list my serial number range in any category besides that I have no prefix and that it would be army issued. On his site he says all the Danish brigade pistols were inspected by Sten Stenmo (SS) mine is impacted by SAS.Your suspicion about the slide being replaced looks right.

The slide serial numbers are a different font than the other 2 serials and the bluing is a bit different on the slide than the rest of the pistol. If it was replaced didn't they usually take the accelerator out?Thanks for the tip on the ammo, I did read alittle about smg ammo being used in these with the early slides.

I have many rifles but this is the first pistol I have ever purchased and I can say im pretty happy. The m40 seems to be a really nice piece, it's a shame most were melted down and not some how corrected.Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk. On the site I believe his statement referred to the large Danish order of 1944 that were delivered in 1946 and 1947. As stated, the Danish Brigade was supplied with regular Army m/40 pistols.

How to read husqvarna chainsaw serial numbers

From Army stocks. Those may well have been inspection stamped by others.

Separate and before the Danish order was even begun.Accelerators may or may not have been taken out. The D Series by SS had the accelerators in them. The Brigade period would have had those in them.I gotcha now, thanks for the info stevan.Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk. Bumping this thread again.Is there any way to date the un-numbered frames made by Husqvarna that Numrich/GPC has on 'broker? This is a picture from the listing showing they apply their own numbersC&R list specifies M/40 Lahtis made prior to 1968 are C&R-able.

But it seems these frames were built as replacements for cracked frames from the SMG ammo. Over in the workbench section, some folks are building up complete pistols from these frames and various parts, which I would imagine only confuses the issue since the pistol would not be 'manufactured' until very recently.

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