Wänzl rifle
For the industrial company based in Germany, see Wanzl (Company).
| Wänzl Rifle | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Type | Breech-loading Musket |
| Place of origin | Austrian Empire |
| Service history | |
| In service | 1867–1918 |
| Used by |
Austria Qing Empire |
| Wars |
Herzegovina Uprising (1882) Boxer Rebellion Balkan Wars World War I (Rear Echelon Troops) |
| Production history | |
| Number built | 70,000 |
| Variants |
Wänzl Infanterie Gewehr M1854/67 Wänzl Infanterie Gewehr M1862/67 Wänzl JagerStutzen M1854/67 Wänzl JagerStutzen M1862/67 Wänzl Extra-Corps Gewehr M1854/67 Wänzl Extra-Corps Gewehr M1862/67 Wänzl WallGewehr M1872 |
| Specifications | |
| Length | 41.4 in (1,050 mm) to 52.6 in (1,340 mm) |
|
| |
| Cartridge | 14×33R rimfire & centerfire |
| Action | front-hinged trapdoor |
| Feed system | Single-shot |
The Wänzl rifle was a breechloading conversion of the M1854 & M1862 Lorenz rifle. The Austro-Hungarian Empire used the Wänzl as their service rifle until they had enough M1867 Werndl-Holub rifles to arm the military.
The rifle was a lifting-block breechloader chambered for the 14×33mm Wänzl rimfire cartridge. The Austrians converted a total of 70,000 Lorenz muskets to Wänzls.
See also
Sources
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