Gun Jesus is amazing. Not only he knows everything about guns, but is also well informed about other countries history. As a chilean, I'm surprised by the level of detail of this review.
The Chileans are very heavily influenced by the German military of the 20th century. I worked with their military for a few weeks in 2015, like all soldiers done traded badges, their expert infantry badge has a stahlhelm on it and they parade with K98s and very Germanic looking uniform tunics.
In the parades use: Mauser 95, long and carbines un the histórical units, the militar scholls and the non comissioned officer scholl use the Steyr 1912-60 rifle, short versión, sorry for my poor english.
My father served in the Cuerpo de Carabineros de Chile for 33 years, I find amazing that there is Mauser that belonged to the Chilean Police for auction in the US. and I bet this weapon is still functional , the just need the right round
Back in 1977 I bought a 1895 Chileno Mauser for $50.00 from a gun dealer still covered in cosmoline. After getting it cleaned up I discovered that all matching serial #'s and the blueing was near 100% with the bore and chamber near perfect. Other than rack wear on the wood furniture it looked to be unissued. In 7mm Mauser it was an excellent shooter and very accurate with good commercial ammo and surplus ammo was available back then for 100 rounds for $15.00 berdan primed.
My grandfather was one of the first carabineros ,he came from the army,he was a husar . light caballeria ,y got a medal for achieving a top score shooting in horse back.jose Elices Candia .
I wish my dad was alive, he was a sargeant for Carabineros de Chile, sort of Gunny Lee Ermey like, and also a great marksman and horseman, with this exact rifle model. He tols me stories about training with this rifle while mounting. Thanks for this video!
@Russian Part-Time Shill jaja confirmo pero creo que solo son los que circulan en el ejército que están fuera de su vida útil y su reemplazo el galil ACE es mucho más confiable (operé ambos fusiles durante años)
European equivalents for the Carabineros de Chile are, among others: Carabinieri (Italy), Gendarmerie Nationale (France), Guarda Nacional Republicana (Portugal), and Guardia Civil (Spain). For a full list of gendarmeries present and past: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gendarmeries
In Brazil, every state has it's own military police force. They function as regular police forces, yet they have military status, and they are considered a reserve of the armed forces, so they can be drawn into service and deployed in case of war... I'm planning on joining my state's police next year.
Just to clear a little bit the role of Carabineros, actually there are two police forces in Chile: "Carabineros de Chile" and "Policía de Investigaciones" (or PDI, literally "Investigation Police"). Basically Carabineros is military branch tasked with law enforcement, counter-terrorism and [land] border patrol, while PDI is a civilian organization that carries the investigations for the courts and handles the immigration checks.
Damn you gun Jesus. Now I want one of those. I don't consider myself a Mauser collector, but you keep showing various models that are so cool. I love this channel. My wife... not so much.
You guys do a really good job, I have steadily been gaining an appreciation for firearms and their history. Now I need to go look up the history of Carabineros de Chile.
Just picked one up last year at a local gun show. It took almost 20 years to find one, I can't wait to see how she does at the range. Outstanding review, Thank you, Ian.
Esa carabina es noble y resistente , cuando hice el curso de formacion de carabineros en la ciudad de ancud si se nos caia mientras estabamos formados la recogiamos con los dientes saludos desde chile.
Excellent Review! I have a Custom 98 Mauser Sporter and an earlier 95 Ludwig&Loewe Chilean Mauser in 7x57 Mauser, which has become one of my all time favorite Rifle Cartridges, and I love seeing older Rifles, so chambered. Particularly Mausers!
Realmente un hermoso video que dejó en claro que el. Respeto a las armas es hermoso independiente de su procedencia y/o adaptación pero un cariñoso saludo de un seguidor suyo desde Chile mis saludos forgotten weapons
Now I need one of these as I lived in Chile for a couple of years around 2000. I saw some Caribineros while I was there, they would drive around in four door Chevy Luv pickups, or on dual sport Motorcycles, Kawasaki KLRs I think. They also often carried Uzi sub machine-guns.
Is like when the german army bought the enigma machine that was already the best encripting device in the world with tens of millions of combinations, but they made it a little more complex so it could have like a couple million more posible combinations and be more perfect.
I owned ser# 17 for quite a few years; everything matched, including the cleaning rod. Beautiful carbine and quite accurate. Most folks don’t know it, but European specs call for a barrel groove diameter of from .285+ to .287+, while the US has always been.284”. A lot of South American military ammo has bullets measuring .286”.
Perfect timing Ian, I just bought number 530 two weeks ago. All numbers match except the cleaning rod. It's an absolutely beautiful gun! Thanks for the great info on it.
Nice to see a rifle from my country, also a rifle I can vouch for how great it feels to shoot Also like you said, they still use today and quite common. For example the guards at La Moneda (the office of the President in downtown Santiago) still patrols with this rifle in they shoulders
James Healy I investigated a bit and learnt that the GOPE (SWAT-like unit from Carabineros) Use weapons as AUG's, M4, MP5 and much more, even the Barrett M82 if necessary
Wow im chilean, and never expected to see a chilean gun here haha Also people, take into consideration these were frontier rifles. Back then chile was a wild place. Corvo fights where common place and that was the tip of the iceberg. This happened in the border with our "lovely" neoghboring coubtries. A combination of factors made these pacos (i.e cops) use these in those areas
I have one of these rifles. It is one of the finest examples of of this model that I have ever seen and also one of the most accurate rifles I have every fired.
In case he reads this: Carabineros is basically a mainly police force with military training. You will see them on the streets patrolling like you would in the US and doing pretty much everything that any police force does around the world. The special training comes in case of war, in which they'll provide internal security, both policing and searching for saboteurs. Basically it allows the army to fight the battles w/o having to worry about the population because they're being taken care of by Carabineros. Former army grunt here who has friends in the institution.
Some needed clarification: Carabineros (not Carabinieros, which is an italianization, as much of what is said here about them) is the MAIN, every-day police force of Chile, by size and role. They don't do police work "as well", they do police work only. Since 2011, they're under the Ministry of Interior, not Defense. They're not really comparable to any existing force in the US or an amalgamation of them, since Chile isn't a federal state, so the federal-local jurisdiction distinction isn't a thing. The best explanation is that they're the only preemptive police force in Chile, that is, a police force intended to prevent or stop crimes, instead of investigating them after the fact (though they do a lot of the latter too). They're a militarized police, in the sense that they have a military-style hierarchy and administration. On another note, kudos on the pronunciation of "Chile".
I really appreciate the historical record Forgotten Weapons is keeping on all of these cool weapons. I wonder if there was ever a thought of putting these to dvd in some fashion?
I have one of these 1935 Chilean, very nice, very accurate, I've never shot over 1 inch at 100 yards. GOD BLESS YOU! GOD BLESS AMERICA!! GLORY BE TO GOD!!!
I do remember some of these were for sale back in the mid 1980s advertised in the American Rifleman back in the day. The add said that these were premium and very good condition rifles.
I have one. It's a very comfortable shooter in 7mm and a very handy rifle. Also, it's a (relatively) cheap way to buy some legendary interwar Mauser quality. The odd-looking front sight protectors are designed so that you can slip the muzzle bands over them when de-stocking the rifle.
Es una excelente arma, buena relación de munición y largo. Patea menos que el Mauser fusil,. Tuve la oportunidad de disparar ambos. En la fuerza ( carabineros ) decíamos que en combate preferíamos la carabina por su precisión.. Muy bonita arma. A sus órdenes..
The chilean shield and "caie" estamped in the stock Is a Mark Made in chile from the institution responsible for performing quality control and the simbol of the estatal weapons, sorry my english Is bad.
Serial numbers on cleaning rods might be for other reasons than a German obsession. Perhaps conscripts have a tendency to use the rods for unauthorised resons and damage them (for examle , using the rods as skuwers over bonfires). Later, to avoid responsibility some conscripts might be tempted to steal a rod from another soldier: the serial number on the rod would prevent it.
Yeah wea are allowed to own guns, is a harder process than us but is possible.... ar15 or any rifle must be single.action or bolt, semi autos only 22lr
These seem similar to the Steyr M1912 Mauser rifles destined for Chile before WWI. Any chance for a video on that rifle? I can't seem to find decent information.
Actually Ian, I think Italy has the same form; the Carabinieri are a military arm, and are thus limited by the Geneva convention (Fmj ball ammo etc). Both my grandfather and I served. I mostly did police services, but there's a mechanised batallion
Sorry to hear about your camera mishap. Any luck on finding a new one? I can only wonder what firearms we will not get to see,that you would have liked to have shown us.
Desde siempre, : Chile, le compra a los que saben, como hacer buenas armas, este es un claro ejemplo. "Alemania y Chile" . siempre son buenos amigos, en el fondo.
Ed Harris There are always professional trolls that down vote every single video for different reasons. I guess that in this channel it's because "gunz"
You see em in Spain as well. My friend got drunk and got lost there one time and they have like three different types of police and NONE of them talk to each other. A nightmare. He turned up in Malaga about a week later shacked up with some bird.
I have an 1895 Loewe made Chilean carbine and a 1924 Spanish made short rifle. The Spanish gun is very well made. But the German one despite being 29 years older is noticeably finer.
Derkman96 Ahh, the government basically merged a bunch of police forces of different intent, and a carbine mounted military unit. I understand the existence of these separate police forces posed certain authority and jurisdiction particularities that were found inconvenient in the eyes of the government, so they decided to get rid of that and have a central 'military' police
Gun Jesus is amazing. Not only he knows everything about guns, but is also well informed about other countries history. As a chilean, I'm surprised by the level of detail of this review.
look alterno siga mi canal de armas, eho en chile
Weeena qliao...
Tb me impresiona el buen Ian. Pensar que aqui las fundes estas maravillas. Saludos.
As an Argentinian, me too. Pd: xd no se porque hable en ingles
Mexicano aquí 🙋🏻♂️Donde se podría conseguir una de esas?
The Chileans are very heavily influenced by the German military of the 20th century. I worked with their military for a few weeks in 2015, like all soldiers done traded badges, their expert infantry badge has a stahlhelm on it and they parade with K98s and very Germanic looking uniform tunics.
Russell Bega Prussian/German uniforms are used in parades on the day after independence day too
@@imperialweimarball yeah, them carries Gewehr98's in the Parade. I'm From chile
In the parades use: Mauser 95, long and carbines un the histórical units, the militar scholls and the non comissioned officer scholl use the Steyr 1912-60 rifle, short versión, sorry for my poor english.
@@imperialweimarballno, es un Steyr modelo 1912
My father served in the Cuerpo de Carabineros de Chile for 33 years, I find amazing that there is Mauser that belonged to the Chilean Police for auction in the US. and I bet this weapon is still functional , the just need the right round
Back in 1977 I bought a 1895 Chileno Mauser for $50.00 from a gun dealer still covered in cosmoline. After getting it cleaned up I discovered that all matching serial #'s and the blueing was near 100% with the bore and chamber near perfect. Other than rack wear on the wood furniture it looked to be unissued. In 7mm Mauser it was an excellent shooter and very accurate with good commercial ammo and surplus ammo was available back then for 100 rounds for $15.00 berdan primed.
VetteKid These are the deals I feel like I'll never get a chance to see, just getting into gun collecting now.
Was the dealer really covered in Cosmoline?
@@AgamemnonTWC You will, keep your eyes open, and be patient.
I'm chilean and i feel very proud!!! VIVA CHILE!
Viva libre y soberano
Serial matching cleaning rods, oh you so German
My grandfather was one of the first carabineros ,he came from the army,he was a husar . light caballeria ,y got a medal for achieving a top score shooting in horse back.jose Elices Candia .
I wish my dad was alive, he was a sargeant for Carabineros de Chile, sort of Gunny Lee Ermey like, and also a great marksman and horseman, with this exact rifle model. He tols me stories about training with this rifle while mounting. Thanks for this video!
gun jesus talking of my country , im blessed
pls talk of something of the FAMAE
Tomas Barahona siga mi canal de armas en español, echo en chile luego review de la famae 9mm
ok,voy a revisar compadre c:
Tomas Barahona gun jesus deserves a sopaipa
@Russian Part-Time Shill jaja confirmo pero creo que solo son los que circulan en el ejército que están fuera de su vida útil y su reemplazo el galil ACE es mucho más confiable (operé ambos fusiles durante años)
European equivalents for the Carabineros de Chile are, among others: Carabinieri (Italy), Gendarmerie Nationale (France), Guarda Nacional Republicana (Portugal), and Guardia Civil (Spain). For a full list of gendarmeries present and past: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gendarmeries
Great list, "guard" in Portuguese is "guarda" not "guardia" tho ;)
Correction made. Obrigado, amigo! ;-)
In Brazil, every state has it's own military police force. They function as regular police forces, yet they have military status, and they are considered a reserve of the armed forces, so they can be drawn into service and deployed in case of war... I'm planning on joining my state's police next year.
"Just think Canadian Mounties, but unmounted"
Kalle R they were mounted in their beginnings and still are un mountain zones. Viva Chile mierda!!!
Im from Chile, and i havent seen this yet, thanks Ian!
Just to clear a little bit the role of Carabineros, actually there are two police forces in Chile: "Carabineros de Chile" and "Policía de Investigaciones" (or PDI, literally "Investigation Police"). Basically Carabineros is military branch tasked with law enforcement, counter-terrorism and [land] border patrol, while PDI is a civilian organization that carries the investigations for the courts and handles the immigration checks.
you missed the gope (like a sort of swat team) which is also a police force
GOPE (Grupo Operaciones Especial) is a branch of Carabineros, not an independent police
And PDI has one of their own, ERTA (Equipo de Reacción Táctica)
You should also point out that, even though they have paramilitary roots, they are the actual everyday-police force.
Matias Bravo jajajajaja sale chistoso hablándose entre ustedes en Inglés.
but... is the sling buckle serialized and matches the rest of the gun?!
Nunca pensé que saldria mi país en este canal ! XD
Alexis Lagos siga mi canal de armas grabado en chilito
Te Vas a sorprender.
Damn you gun Jesus. Now I want one of those. I don't consider myself a Mauser collector, but you keep showing various models that are so cool. I love this channel. My wife... not so much.
Get a new wife, duh
Add this to the number of times I learned things about my country from people who doesn't live here lol. Thanks Ian
Danox94 siga mi canal de armas en español desde chilito
totalmente cierto, aprendo mas de mi país gracias a extranjeros que gracias a chilenos, igual con la ración militar que reviso Steve1989MREinfo
i've waited years for you guys to feature a Chilean weapon. Thanks for this!
You guys do a really good job, I have steadily been gaining an appreciation for firearms and their history. Now I need to go look up the history of Carabineros de Chile.
Love it, Mausers have always been one of my favorites and one with special markings from my country makes it even better, keep up the great vids man.
Just picked one up last year at a local gun show. It took almost 20 years to find one, I can't wait to see how she does at the range. Outstanding review, Thank you, Ian.
Esa carabina es noble y resistente , cuando hice el curso de formacion de carabineros en la ciudad de ancud si se nos caia mientras estabamos formados la recogiamos con los dientes saludos desde chile.
Excellent Review! I have a Custom 98 Mauser Sporter and an earlier 95 Ludwig&Loewe Chilean Mauser in 7x57 Mauser, which has become one of my all time favorite Rifle Cartridges, and I love seeing older Rifles, so chambered. Particularly Mausers!
Realmente un hermoso video que dejó en claro que el. Respeto a las armas es hermoso independiente de su procedencia y/o adaptación pero un cariñoso saludo de un seguidor suyo desde Chile mis saludos forgotten weapons
Now I need one of these as I lived in Chile for a couple of years around 2000. I saw some Caribineros while I was there, they would drive around in four door Chevy Luv pickups, or on dual sport Motorcycles, Kawasaki KLRs I think. They also often carried Uzi sub machine-guns.
But if you don't have the right cleaning rod, IT VILL NOT BE KLEAN!
Is like when the german army bought the enigma machine that was already the best encripting device in the world with tens of millions of combinations, but they made it a little more complex so it could have like a couple million more posible combinations and be more perfect.
Great...¡¡¡¡¡¡ hahahaha...¡¡¡
I owned ser# 17 for quite a few years; everything matched, including the cleaning rod. Beautiful carbine and quite accurate. Most folks don’t know it, but European specs call for a barrel groove diameter of from .285+ to .287+, while the US has always been.284”. A lot of South American military ammo has bullets measuring .286”.
Perfect timing Ian, I just bought number 530 two weeks ago. All numbers match except the cleaning rod. It's an absolutely beautiful gun! Thanks for the great info on it.
Easily the best gun channel
Man! This company has every gun known to man. I literally can not think of a gun that he did not review!
Nice to see a rifle from my country, also a rifle I can vouch for how great it feels to shoot
Also like you said, they still use today and quite common. For example the guards at La Moneda (the office of the President in downtown Santiago) still patrols with this rifle in they shoulders
They guard the President with an eighty-three-year-old bolt action rifle? That's awesome.
James Healy Its mostly for traditional/formal purpouses, they use special uniforms too.
Yeah makes sense, as much ceremonial as an actual defence. The real weapons are probably stashed somewhere just out of sight.
James Healy These guards are the ones shown in 8:21
James Healy I investigated a bit and learnt that the GOPE (SWAT-like unit from Carabineros) Use weapons as AUG's, M4, MP5 and much more, even the Barrett M82 if necessary
Wow im chilean, and never expected to see a chilean gun here haha
Also people, take into consideration these were frontier rifles. Back then chile was a wild place. Corvo fights where common place and that was the tip of the iceberg. This happened in the border with our "lovely" neoghboring coubtries. A combination of factors made these pacos (i.e cops) use these in those areas
I have one of these rifles. It is one of the finest examples of of this model that I have ever seen and also one of the most accurate rifles I have every fired.
No way. I was just trying to find info on this rifle and here it is!
A Mauser is sexy wherever it is from
Old is gold..
Thank you .
This is the greatest spicy rifle of all time.
In case he reads this: Carabineros is basically a mainly police force with military training. You will see them on the streets patrolling like you would in the US and doing pretty much everything that any police force does around the world. The special training comes in case of war, in which they'll provide internal security, both policing and searching for saboteurs. Basically it allows the army to fight the battles w/o having to worry about the population because they're being taken care of by Carabineros.
Former army grunt here who has friends in the institution.
This is a beautiful rifle, I'd be interested in hearing about more guns from South America.
Some needed clarification: Carabineros (not Carabinieros, which is an italianization, as much of what is said here about them) is the MAIN, every-day police force of Chile, by size and role. They don't do police work "as well", they do police work only. Since 2011, they're under the Ministry of Interior, not Defense. They're not really comparable to any existing force in the US or an amalgamation of them, since Chile isn't a federal state, so the federal-local jurisdiction distinction isn't a thing. The best explanation is that they're the only preemptive police force in Chile, that is, a police force intended to prevent or stop crimes, instead of investigating them after the fact (though they do a lot of the latter too). They're a militarized police, in the sense that they have a military-style hierarchy and administration.
On another note, kudos on the pronunciation of "Chile".
I really appreciate the historical record Forgotten Weapons is keeping on all of these cool weapons. I wonder if there was ever a thought of putting these to dvd in some fashion?
Jeff England i think he answered it in one of his q&as. I think he said it was too expensive for the effort and to few people would actually buy it
Bueskull, I must have missed that. Thanks for the update.
Jeff England if you for some reason want to make a dvd set for yourself it's pretty easy. Do you use Windows on your computer?
Derkman96, I do know how to make DVDs but I not sure about copyright issues.
Derkman96, I do know how to make DVDs but I not sure about copyright issues.
I have one of these 1935 Chilean, very nice, very accurate, I've never shot over 1 inch at 100 yards. GOD BLESS YOU! GOD BLESS AMERICA!! GLORY BE TO GOD!!!
I do remember some of these were for sale back in the mid 1980s advertised in the American Rifleman back in the day. The add said that these were premium and very good condition rifles.
"You're not going to beat the quality of a 1935 Mauser"
Challenge accepted
I have one. It's a very comfortable shooter in 7mm and a very handy rifle. Also, it's a (relatively) cheap way to buy some legendary interwar Mauser quality. The odd-looking front sight protectors are designed so that you can slip the muzzle bands over them when de-stocking the rifle.
Most interesting!
Thank you Ian , for that
Es una excelente arma, buena relación de munición y largo. Patea menos que el Mauser fusil,. Tuve la oportunidad de disparar ambos.
En la fuerza ( carabineros ) decíamos que en combate preferíamos la carabina por su precisión..
Muy bonita arma.
A sus órdenes..
The chilean shield and "caie" estamped in the stock Is a Mark Made in chile from the institution responsible for performing quality control and the simbol of the estatal weapons, sorry my english Is bad.
SO WHAT? XD
Finally some good content
Viva Chile!.
.Good video.. thanks
lutronc revise mi canal de armas filmado desde chile.para el mundo
In 7mm mauser that looks to be one of the ultimate mausers to own and use
Saludos desde Chile. Muy buen vídeo.
The cleaning rod is the perfect example for german "accuracy". l come from Germany so I now from what I'm talking about :D .
los pacos
tienen tetas
Las pacas tienen Tula
Loh pako*
Y ese es su aporte, aweonaos.
Jajajaja la wea chistosa, pero excellente video en todo caso
I hope there is a video on the Japanese Mauser Siamese Contract in the same lot, too :D
Serial numbers on cleaning rods might be for other reasons than a German obsession. Perhaps conscripts have a tendency to use the rods for unauthorised resons and damage them (for examle , using the rods as skuwers over bonfires). Later, to avoid responsibility some conscripts might be tempted to steal a rod from another soldier: the serial number on the rod would prevent it.
When you suddenly realize Ian bears a striking resemblance to depictions of General Custer
Gorgeous.
I've seen a lot of mauser type rifles but for some reason I really like this one
Ian, did you notice that someone had marked where the front sight should be so they could quickly fix it if it got knocked out of position?
Que grande mi chile lindooo
Thanks for another awesome video
Somo el mejor paí de shile
DanielOjeda siga mi canal de armas en español desde chile! Viva chile mierda!
DisparArmas 👍👍
Si y somos tan buen pais , que el hecho de que escribas, "Shile", y no como se debe " Chile", yo lo veo como una ( NIÑERIA ), y nada mas .
@@guascazo Weon fome
@@guascazo es talla tatita
From your description, the Carabinieros sound a lot like the Carabineri (Italian MP/gendarmerie force).
I am from Chile niceee
El RinCón del mon0 sigue mi canal dispara punto cl
Do they let zitizens have guns down there ?
Yeah wea are allowed to own guns, is a harder process than us but is possible.... ar15 or any rifle must be single.action or bolt, semi autos only 22lr
Viva chile mierda
Lots of bureaucracy and paperwork but yes
Problem is most guns here are expensive, bersa thunder .380 (one of the cheapest pistols) - $572 USD
These seem similar to the Steyr M1912 Mauser rifles destined for Chile before WWI. Any chance for a video on that rifle? I can't seem to find decent information.
Great looking rifle!
We're the best country of chile
Forgotten Serializations
Actually Ian, I think Italy has the same form; the Carabinieri are a military arm, and are thus limited by the Geneva convention (Fmj ball ammo etc). Both my grandfather and I served. I mostly did police services, but there's a mechanised batallion
Salud carabinero.
Sorry to hear about your camera mishap. Any luck on finding a new one? I can only wonder what firearms we will not get to see,that you would have liked to have shown us.
Desde siempre, : Chile, le compra a los que saben, como hacer buenas armas, este es un claro ejemplo. "Alemania y Chile" . siempre son buenos amigos, en el fondo.
20 Seconds Ago!! Watching this now
Carabinieros de Chile, or as they're more often referred to today... *The Avengers*
Who down votes these videos? I don't get it
Ed Harris
There are always professional trolls that down vote every single video for different reasons. I guess that in this channel it's because "gunz"
Anti-gun downvoting bots
In this? My guess is Bolivian and Peruvian hardliners. We have quite the checkered history with them.
@@Diegopedia303 Nah, if Ian shows a Corvo then would be peruvians and bolivians
You see em in Spain as well. My friend got drunk and got lost there one time and they have like three different types of police and NONE of them talk to each other. A nightmare. He turned up in Malaga about a week later shacked up with some bird.
in chile they are basically the only one police force. there is a second group in charge of police investigation and that is it.
I have an 1895 Loewe made Chilean carbine and a 1924 Spanish made short rifle. The Spanish gun is very well made. But the German one despite being 29 years older is noticeably finer.
Great video. Thanks buddy.
Hi. One Q. Is cleaning rod long enough for this short barrel or it mast be extended like for long barrel mauser type?
Viva 🇨🇱
Great vid gun jesus aka Ian
The CIAE stamp could be: Cía E, that is Company E. Cía is the abbreviation por Company in Spanish.
How much did this weapon go for?
The Fiscal police must be o tax/customs LEO/police, the markings in the circle more likely to be a stilized form of Chile.
If I ever get a chance I’d love to go to a rock Island auction, even if I wasn’t buying anything!
5 rifles would be a nice start to a Mauser collection.
That is one interesting rifle.
More like Order and Patriotism on that translation, nice video!
Viva Chile
I'm from Chile !!! amazing video Ian
highdarktemplar siga mi canal saludos desde chile!!! Canal armas en spanish
That's a nice lil carbonara
Caballero,de Chile...
Offered in red or white at your local supermarket.
Serve chilled
Orden y patria
OMG. DUDE, I AM CHILEAN XD. Carabineros de la Nación, Mr. Ian
TheOldD G what is the carabineros? I saw another comment suggest they're like an equivalent to US national guard
they are like both in the same intitution , they where created for the ejercito de Chile (chilean army )
Derkman96 Ahh, the government basically merged a bunch of police forces of different intent, and a carbine mounted military unit. I understand the existence of these separate police forces posed certain authority and jurisdiction particularities that were found inconvenient in the eyes of the government, so they decided to get rid of that and have a central 'military' police
ohh incredlible
It'd be neat if the front sling swivel mount was detachable so you could make it into ye ole timey single point sling
texas rangers is about as close as we had/have..
I have exactly the same one, except mine is all nickel plated for military parades.
Very cool lot of rifles this one is in. Id like to have them.
Cool gun