psteinmayer wrote on Nov 1
st, 2016 at 2:20pm:
The design is actually Parashooter's.
I thought so until I found this picture from a Norwegian museum collection -
(You need to Login to view media files and links)Literally, "Hagen's load frame", but "charger" seems a better word. (I try to avoid "stripper clip" as a nonsense term invented by us poor Yanks who have trouble differentiating between "clip" and "charger" - adding "stripper" to enhance our confusion. Of course back in the Krag era, we called them all "packets".
)
Hagen was a significant presence even back when Oslo was called Kristiana (pre-1925). This Lyman 48K, made here in Connecticut and much-modified by Hagen, was fitted to my 1925-dated M1912/22 long before I found it in a local shop -
(You need to Login to view media files and links)Mönsterbeskyttet = Trademark? Tiny lettering above slide binding nut reads "Lyman, Middlefield". Elevation markings are in meters (x100), calibrated for same trajectory as service tangent.
(You need to Login to view media files and links)Aperture was re-positioned below cross-arm and long stop screw fitted from below, adapting Lyman 48 to work with normal-height front sight.
I found this on the web at
(You need to Login to view media files and links) (interesting site) -
L H Hagen
A little taste of a Norwegian Gunsmith’s store from 1908. It’s a pity the fixtures and fittings like these no more are to be found – at least not in our part of the World.
L. H. Hagen was a successful gunsmith and probably Mr. Larsen’s largest customer in the 1870s. He was never the inventor that Larsen was, but he was a good business man and built up a solid business that lasted almost 100 years. He is possibly best known for his Hagen Herkules rifle, built on Larsen’s tennstempel rifle’s principles, but with a bettered locking enabling it to fire more powerful smokeless cartridges.
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