Werndl–Holub rifle
| M1867 Werndl–Holub | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Type | Service rifle | 
| Place of origin | .svg.png) Austria-Hungary | 
| Service history | |
| In service | 1867–1918 | 
| Used by | Austria-Hungary Montenegro Persia Argentina (limited use) | 
| Wars | Herzegovina uprising (1882) Balkan Wars World War I (limited)[1] | 
| Production history | |
| Designer | Josef Werndl and Karel Holub | 
| Designed | 1860s | 
| Manufacturer | Steyr | 
| Produced | 1867–1888 | 
| Number built | 500,000 (approx.) | 
| Variants | M1873 M67/77 M73/77 Extra-Corps Carbine Finance-Gewehr Carbine Cavalry Carbine | 
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 9.65 lb (4.4 kg) | 
| Length | 50.4 in (128.0 cm) | 
| Barrel length | 33.3 in (84.6 cm) | 
|  | |
| Cartridge | 11.15×42mmR (M1867) 11×58mmR (1877 Upgrade) | 
| Caliber | 11.15 mm | 
| Action | Rotating drum bolt | 
| Feed system | Single-shot breech-loading | 
| Sights | Iron sights | 
The M1867 Werndl–Holub was a single-shot breechloading rifle that the Austro-Hungarian army adopted in 1867. It replaced the Wanzl breechloader conversion of the muzzle-loading Lorenz rifle. Josef Werndl (1831–1889) and Karel Holub (1830–1903) designed and patented their design; Werndl later bought out all the rights.


ŒWG (Österreichische Waffenfabriksgesellschaft) produced the Werndl and chambered it for the 11mm scharfe Patrone M.67[1] (11.15×42R) cartridge. In 1877 the military rechambered the Werndl for the bottleneck 11mm scharfe Patrone M.77 (11.15×58mmR) cartridge.
In spite of the Werndl being long obsolete by World War I, the Austro-Hungarian forces issued Werndl rifles to rear-echelon units to free up more modern rifles for use by front-line troops.[1]
See also
|  | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Werndl Rifle. | 
- Weapons of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
- Mannlicher M1886 – the next Austro-Hungarian service rifle
References
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