Home Creators Posts Import Register Favorites Logout
haven't archived this post yet. have a subscription? use the importer!

Files

Previews only

Mauser M90 DA: Not Mauser and Not a High Power (Ad-free)

Our book on Hungarian AKs, "Rifles on the Danube", is available here: https://www.headstamppublishing.com/danube-book In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Mauser firm was not in good shape. It had no new products, and its ability to survive marketing its name and legacy pistols was waning. Without much vision for the future, it turned to rebranding production from other companies, like Renato Gamba in Italy and FÉG in Hungary. From FEG they got the "Mauser Model 80" - a licensed copy of the Browning High Power - and the "Mauser Model 90" - a rebadged FEG P9R. The P9R / Mauser 90 is often assumed to simply be a double-action modification of the High Power, but this is not true. The slide is almost identical is appearance to the High Power slide except for the decocking lever, but the frame has several important differences. The barrel lockup is taken from the S&W series of automatic pistols instead of the High Power, and the trigger mechanism is a stirrup around the magazine well instead of moving through the slide like a High Power. In total, FEG made 26,000 of these pistols for Mauser. The plan was to sell them in Europe, but by 1995 sales remained poor and about 18,000 remained in Mauser inventory. In order to get rid of them, they were offered on the American market, where they were gobbled up by importers like Century between 1995 and 2001. http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com

Comments

Guido Schriewer

if you get your hands of those italian mauser revolvers....! never heard feg would do bad quality. can't see nothing wrong with that pistol at all. ok magazins are too bad.

Bruce Brodnax

KBI sold them in the '90s. They confused a lot of people for a few years, because they looked so much like the true Hi-Power clones [PJK-9HP] vs the DA P9R-HP (the alphabet soup model nomenclature used by KBI did not help distinguish the visually near identical pistols adequately.) Shopping for mags was a craps shoot because a lot of the P9R mags were mislabeled as "Hi Power" and a lot of the P9R owners were unaware they did not have a DA Hi-Power, but a pistol that required a totally distinct magazine. But like all FEG pistols I'm aware of, everyone was happy w/ their serviceability for the price point...

Tom DeGisi

It looks like Smith and Wesson and FEG really improved the High Power.