Ammo for M1916 Spanish Mauser

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  • Merc
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2016
    • 1690

    #1

    Ammo for M1916 Spanish Mauser

    I’m looking for the correct ammunition for my M1916 Spanish Mauser. The box of Remington 175 gr round nose 7 mm Mauser soft point cartridges in the photo came with the rifle. Only 3 un-fired cartridges were left in the box.

    5BB23716-816D-4FA5-87D9-BA46C5AF90FC.jpg

    Does anyone know where I can buy 175 gr round nose 7 mm Mauser loaded cartridges or bullets for reloading?
  • gwp
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 1088

    #2
    Try


    OR

    https://gun.deals/category/ammo?caliber=438

    Comment

    • Gun Smoke
      Banned
      • Sep 2019
      • 1658

      #3
      I'm sure there are variations out there to prove me wrong but your Mauser is probably referred to as a 1893 Mauser since it is chambered for the 7mm round.

      The 1916 Mausers were chambered for the 308 or 7.62 NATO round otherwise essentially the same rifle and some may have been converted from '93's.

      I have one of each. The '93 I have shot using old foreign berdain ammo.

      The 1916 I bought because of the grain of the wood and that I could shoot 308 in it. I later discovered that due to the bolt having a single locking lug it couldn't handle a straight diet of modern 308 ammo so I have never shot it.

      Comment

      • Liam
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 1376

        #4
        I'm pretty sure the .308 or 7.62x51 (reloader will argue they are not the same) came about in early 1950's. If you, indeed, have an original 1916 Spanish Mauser it should be chambered in 7x57mm (or "7mm Mauser"). Some were subsequently rechambered to 7.92x57 (or "8mm Mauser"). This should be denoted on the rifle somewhere, like the receiver. My source of info. is Ball's "Military Mausers of the World."
        "Wars are, of course, as a rule to be avoided; but they are far better than certain kinds of peace." - T.R.

        Comment

        • Merc
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2016
          • 1690

          #5
          Here are some photos:

          51C9F769-C058-4895-B4AD-AB607E4AD5D1.jpgD7225773-B609-4FEC-A874-FB8651467045.jpg

          DB06F6D1-7411-4B51-AAE6-C8BF16B81404.jpg42AEAD53-005C-4E63-B8E7-43943F9E165C.jpg326B3CC4-874B-4849-AB4C-B1C233B23DFD.jpg

          The s/n is Y10. The following is stamped on the receiver: “Fabrica De Armas” “Oviedo” “1931”

          Comment

          • Gun Smoke
            Banned
            • Sep 2019
            • 1658

            #6
            Originally posted by Liam
            I'm pretty sure the .308 or 7.62x51 (reloader will argue they are not the same) came about in early 1950's. If you, indeed, have an original 1916 Spanish Mauser it should be chambered in 7x57mm (or "7mm Mauser"). Some were subsequently rechambered to 7.92x57 (or "8mm Mauser"). This should be denoted on the rifle somewhere, like the receiver. My source of info. is Ball's "Military Mausers of the World."
            I know the Israelis rebarreled some K98 mausers to 308 (7.62x51) but if the 1916 bolt can't hold up to this round I wouldn't want to shoot one chambered for 7.92x57. Those things kick like a mule. The K98 has an extra locking lug on the bolt to accommodate such.

            I've read where the 1916's made after 1950 had better hardened bolts and thus not so much of an issue.

            I believe this article clears things up a little and you are correct that the first 1916's were 7mm.

            Comment

            • JimF
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2009
              • 1179

              #7
              Originally posted by Gun Smoke
              . . . . . . .The K98 has an extra locking lug on the bolt to accommodate such.
              . . . . . .]
              This is an off-told myth! . . . .

              That “extra locking lug” does NOT engage the receiver . . . it is a SAFETY lug that will hold the bolt forward in case the forward locking lugs fail.

              As a design feature, it is more appealing than the safety lug of an American Springfield M1903, in that the bridge of the Mauser is much lower than the bridge of the Springfield.

              Comment

              • Gun Smoke
                Banned
                • Sep 2019
                • 1658

                #8
                Originally posted by JimF
                This is an off-told myth! . . . .

                That “extra locking lug” does NOT engage the receiver . . . it is a SAFETY lug that will hold the bolt forward in case the forward locking lugs fail.

                As a design feature, it is more appealing than the safety lug of an American Springfield M1903, in that the bridge of the Mauser is much lower than the bridge of the Springfield.
                Thanks. Even the article I listed speaks of the 3rd rear locking lug.

                Comment

                • Gun Smoke
                  Banned
                  • Sep 2019
                  • 1658

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Merc
                  Does anyone know where I can buy 175 gr round nose 7 mm Mauser loaded cartridges or bullets for reloading?
                  According to this it looks like Hornady makes them. A local shop may be able to order them for you if you don't want to buy these.

                  https://www.gunbroker.com/item/866970125

                  Comment

                  • Merc
                    Senior Member
                    • Feb 2016
                    • 1690

                    #10
                    I’m sure this is a M1916 7mm Spanish Mauser rifle. A .308 bullet does not begin to enter the muzzle but the 7 mm round nose goes about 3/4 of the way in. Is the long round nose 7 mm Mauser Remington bullet the correct ammo for this rifle?

                    Comment

                    • Gun Smoke
                      Banned
                      • Sep 2019
                      • 1658

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Merc
                      I’m sure this is a M1916 7mm Spanish Mauser rifle. A .308 bullet does not begin to enter the muzzle but the 7 mm round nose goes about 3/4 of the way in. Is the long round nose 7 mm Mauser Remington bullet the correct ammo for this rifle?
                      I had no question over the caliber, just the name/model.

                      The RN bullet came first but they wouldn't have been made by Remington originally.

                      Scroll down to military use/military ammo on the link below:



                      Here is some old UMC ammo on GB if interested. The seller has more than one listing on these:

                      https://www.gunbroker.com/item/859186976

                      https://www.gunbroker.com/All/search...Sellers=183669
                      Last edited by Gun Smoke; 04-29-2020, 09:03.

                      Comment

                      • jon_norstog
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 3896

                        #12
                        That is a beautiful rifle and should not be confused with the '93 Mausers that came back from Cuba after the Spanish-American War. This is a modern rifle and you can shoot modern ammo in it, FN 7X57 ammo was hot stuff and that's what the Franco government bought for those rifles. If you are reloading, you have a wide choice of bullets up to and including 175 gr. Or you can buy Norma ammo.

                        Don't take my word for it. Take the rifle to a 'smith and listen to what he says.

                        Good luck!

                        jn
                        Last edited by jon_norstog; 05-15-2020, 09:32.

                        Comment

                        • fguffey
                          Senior Member
                          • May 2012
                          • 684

                          #13
                          As a design feature, it is more appealing than the safety lug of an American Springfield M1903, in that the bridge of the Mauser is much lower than the bridge of the Springfield.
                          I do not know what appeals to most but for the reloader/smith there is nothing that offers more advantage than the exposed 03, 03A3.

                          F. Guffey

                          Comment

                          • Art
                            Senior Member, Deceased
                            • Dec 2009
                            • 9256

                            #14
                            Everything John Norstog says is true. It is a beautiful little Spanish M 1916 short rifle and the correct ammunition is the 7x57mm Mauser (the Spanish Hornet.) Most of these were converted from full size M1895 rifles. They are fine, fine rifles. Congratulations on a great find.

                            My "Small Arms of the World" shows a muzzle velocity of 2625 fps for the rifle which means it's sights are probably calibrated for the 140 gr spitzer bullet. My Hornaday Handbook shows 2300 ft sec for 175 gr round nose with a max load and 2600-2700 fps with 139 gr bullets which was the other military option. Either will work fine in your gun but may not shoot to the sights but you'll figure that out. 139 gr. loaded ammo is easier to fine so you might pick up a box of that and see how it does. Midway USA seems to have a good stock of the 139/140 gr ammunition in stock and a 173 gr. spitzer by S&B. The only 175 SP round nose they show is from Federal and it's unavailable. If you can't find commercially loaded 175 gr. bullets they are still listed in the Hornady handbook. You might contact them directly if you want to whip up a batch of those.

                            That is a really ancient box or Remington that came with the rifle. I haven't seen a box like that since I was a kid and that was a loooooong time ago.
                            Last edited by Art; 05-16-2020, 07:34.

                            Comment

                            • Tuna
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 2686

                              #15
                              The 1916 Spanish Mausers were ALL conversions to 7.62x51 Cetme. While this is in a .308 diameter it was loaded to lower pressures then the standard NATO round. It did not exceed the 7x57 pressures the rifle was originally made in. One can fire NATO 7.62 in it but do not use .308 ammo. Especially the heavy 180 gr bullets as it will start bending the lugs. If you do shoot it with NATO spec ammo then keep a close eye on the fired primers. If you see any primers backing out of their pockets even a little then stop shooting as the lugs are moving and head space is changing.

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