Haenel 33 Senior Hugo Schmeisser genius German k98 military training air rifle 49 310 vintage airgun
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ต.ค. 2024
- Review of the Haenel 33 Sportmodel Senior air rifle.
Designed by Hugo Schmeisser and manufactured by the Haenel company in Germany from 1933 to 1942.
It is believed that it was called the '33 Sportmodell' to get around the Treaty of Versailles restriction on producing military training weapons by making it sound like a sporting airgun.
Exact details about who may have used it for training purposes are not known, but it was recommended to the Hitler Jugent for training purposes, along with a Diana model 30 which looked similar but was an underlever tap loader, so wasn't a bolt action.
A really great design that would live on for another 50 years in fairgrounds everywhere through the Haenel 49 & 310 and Anschutz 275.
Thanks for watching.
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muy lindo rifle
Ola Matt, I really love your videos, thank you so much for all your detailed and excellent work.I have a fantastic Haenel Model V Repeater, with 18 shot drum magazine. It belonged to my grandfather who passed it on to my father and my father gave it to me when I turned 10 years old. now I am almost 50 years old and the Haenel is still fantastic. Cheers
Ola, that is fantastic, they are extremely rare now.
Although that drum mag was patented by Hugo Schmeisser there was a man called Joe Henry Cox. He was a pellet maker and patentee of a pan mag. air rifle of Guildford St., Lozells, Birmingham in the early 1900’s. No relation to Fredrick Stanley Cox, inventor of the Britannia air rifle. Cheers
I want it
Guten Abend, ich besitze ein Luftgewehr Haenel Modell 310 und habe ein Magazinproblem. Ich habe es verloren. Können Sie mir eines per DHL schicken? DANKE
hallo. ich habe keins übrig, aber in Deutschland sind viele auf egun.de verfügbar
Nice video on a classic air rifle that has become quite collectable. I truly enjoy mine so I really appreciate your video. Not many people even know what these are.
that air chamber design is just like the daisy air guns
Is that right? Like the red Ryder etc?
Yes they are nearly identical
Another to add to the list to get. Nice bit of kit.
Superb presentation. I like the way how You talk about airguns and present how it works internal and external.
I own 310 and love it.
Thanks
Nice review 👌 9:05
These are very interesting rifles. I have an Anschutz mod 275. They are part catapult, part airgun. The Daisy lever bb guns work on the same principle.
Thanks for another great video.
Thanks mate, John Griffiths traced the original patent for that probe design to George Gunn (of Haviland and Gunn fame) in 1895. who'd have thought?
As you've stated on the BBS forum "It's a thing of genius."
It is. It works better than we would imagine had we only saw it as a drawing.
I think out all of these 4.4mm military trainers that the model 33 is the best in quality of construction. Having said that they are all very well made and give the impression of lasting forever.
very interesting! I have a Haenel model 1 break barrel coming soon!
Lol funfact, the picture of the 310 (+2) @ 6.35 is from VAG i recon, send in by Frank korn (frakor collection) those wooden displays are hanging on my wall now. :)
Nice, yes you see a lot of rare air rifles with that background from the late great Frank Korn. Often his pictures are the only ones of particularly rare pieces.
Unrelated but did you pick your jacket up after the course yesterday, (sunday 31st April )
Yeah, thanks for checking. You shot with Simon?
I saw an Anschutz bb bolt action rifle at a funfair last summer, amongst some other old rifles on a shooting stall ran by two guys.
I went to look because it's unusual nowadays as it is usually laser or light operated stalls.👍
Nice, that would probably have been an Anschutz 275 which was their version of the later Haenel 49a. Works exactly the same. You used to see them at loads of funfairs in the U.K. as well as BSA break barrels. Cheers 👍
One stand at Brussel's Foire du Midi still has these. They've been toroughly beat up but still work!
It’s amazing how tough they are!
This gun takes 4,4 or is it "worn" out that you have 4,5 in the video. Thx for the explanation had no clue how this mechanism worked.
Hi, I have some ‘4.4mm H&N sport’ copper coated lead bbs that actually measure as 4.26-4.27mm. the ‘4.5mm excite’ copper coated bb’s actually measure as 4.28-4.30mm and are more accurate than the H&N and cycle pefectly. The rifle has been well used over the last 90 odd years so must be well worn. It has two tiny pinholes on the stock, I think it was from an ID plate for a fairground shooting gallery or something. These things are built to last! Cheers
@@dkjngl1 Never thought about it to messure them, asumed all bbs would be the right size, good tip, i'll check them next time i shoot. Amazing gun your Haenel 33 would live to find one sometimes for my collection.
Hi I’m looking for help I have an old Diana series 70 model 75 that I rescued from a skip possibly also knows as a tinplate ? It’s post ww2 but that’s all I know as google wasn’t much help .long story short I want to restore it but it’s missing the cocking lever would you happen to know anywhere that supplies them ?
A quick search came up with nothing too, but it’s a Milbro Diana and the part is: UL136
@@dkjngl1 brilliant Thankyou for that I’ve managed to find that there pretty much identical to some Webley rifles I believe it’s the junior and possibly the falcon would parts be transferable ?
@@chrisfoster9679 no idea mate, I don’t have any experience with any of those rifles. get onto the airgunbbs collectables forum and ask on there, I’m sure someone will know 👍
This rifle appears to be an almost perfect plinker , easy to load & cock , no Co2 ,nice repeating mechanism , limited recoil perfect for beginners and anyone just wanting a bit of plinking fun it's about time for a rerelease of this or a similar lower cost synthetic stock version for those on a budget who don't want or need a more powerful pellet rifle and only want to do a spot of practice with the kids in the garden. Thanks , Shoot Straight Stay Safe & Stay Well.
Diana did one recently called the ‘Oktoberfest’ that worked in a similar way but I think it wasn’t as nicely made. You are right, these bolt actions are perfect plinkers! Cheers
@@dkjngl1 Yep they released them a couple of years ago in America , but according to the literature they use a small BB and standard 4.5mm BBs won't fit , but I wasn't aware that they'd released it in the UK . I shall have to have to do a spot of Googling later . Thanks for the info . I must say I always enjoy Your video's and am a lover of older simpler break barrels or underlevers over the modern PCP & Co2 stuff , that's not to say I don't like them just ,I prefer the older stuff .
I was competing today with a HW97k and it’s an amazing piece of precision kit, but I really like the variety and ingenuity of the older designs. I’m planning on doing more rifle videos in the future. Lots of vintage match rifles! Cheers
Понравилась анимация работы пневматики 😁👍 Спасибо за обзор системы выстрела.
Немцы экономно подошли к вопросу. У итальянцев ружья Opera Nazionale Balilla (Moschetto TS modello "Balilla" F.N.A. (Brescia) или Moschetto modello "Balilla" Grazian (Verona)) обычно стреляли через переходник 6 мм патронами Флобера. Пневматика в этом вопросе экономней и, как мне кажется, долговечнее.
Nice review with lots of details! I have three 310's, including one with the multi-lever trigger from the 308 Super. I sent the scans of the 1993 Haenel catalog to Mr Garvin, and I am pleased that you included the picture of the 400. These are really fun airguns! Great job.
The 400 was unknown to a lot of us, many thanks for sending the catalogue pics to Danny. Cheers
Since you last uploaded a vlog on the Haenel 33 at Bisley, I have added a Venuswaffenwerk Mars Model 115 and CzVz47 bolt action military trainers to my collection. Can’t beat a bolt action cocking air rifle for an immersive experience in history. Thank you for uploading, great illustration on how they work 👍
Glad to hear you picked those up, both lovely examples of military trainers. How is the Mars 115 to shoot? They go for big money in Germany
Great video, really tops with the explanation of the mechanism. Interesting to see Haenel's simple method of getting the air into the tube, compared to the complicated way it's done on the Mars 115.
I’ve just learnt it’s the same as the Daisy red Ryder, not sure which came first. Cheers
I really love your videos, thank you so much for covering all these interesting older guns! I've got a Haenel 311 that I've been meaning to make a video about for ages now, it's a lovely rifle, but I've yet to find a pellet that doesn't occasionally jam. Still, it's one of my favourites.
Have you tried the new excite copper coated bbs?
@@dkjngl1Ah, I don't have a 33, sorry, and my 311 is a tap-loading pellet rifle, so no, haven't tried those BBs in anything yet.
awesome gun mate . i thought it was very cool indeed . loved the cocking action . i can see why it was used as a trainer definitely
Cheers mate
Another very enjoyable video, thanks for taking the trouble to make these.
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks
It cant be very powerful if cocked by a bolt, can it?
That’s right, 370fps and 2.3ftlbs. Built for accuracy and ease of cocking rather than power
Note that the cocking handle is a force multiplying lever, one does not pull directly against the spring force. I have the pleasure to own a 49a and I find the cocking motion easy and natural to perform with the moderate force it requires. But as said, it's made for punching holes on paper, not for pest control or power bragging.
@@mottee I did indeed take that into account. It's still a very firearm-like mechanism. If it would've had an actual bolt type mechanism it could've either been as powerful as a nerf gun, or an absolute bear to cock.
There were some like that, the Mars 115 etc that were really hard to cock and very low powered, also many were gravity fed and prone to not cycling a bb properly. I think the little magazine on these really helps with reliability
@@dkjngl1 Yes the magazine seems nice, shame such a magazine for skirted pellets is rare. probably because of the many shapes of pellets and their geometry not allowing it easily. I believe Record did have a go at it once.