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Grandpas Radom vis 35

Xtremewv99

Active member
I mentioned this pistol in a thread about IDing my grandfathers K98 and I had said I would pop over here and post the pictures and story behind it

So Id seen the gun more than a few times but i could never get any kind of story out of him. Closed as a clam. We had always assumed he had just traded for it or something at the end if the war. He was with the 13 armored infantry and was there for the last 6 or 8 months of the war, but we had never heard him tell any stories of the last bit, to any of us, his wife included. So we just kind of respected that and that was it. So fast forward to 2 summers ago, about a month before he died I guess he knew it was coming, because he finally opened up about the last months. He was involved in some really ugly last stands on the way into Germany, and after taking some kind of enemy embankment, they had taken a few dozen prisoners and one of the Getman officers surrendered his sidearm and belt to my grandfather (who was a nobody, of course). When I asked more details hed just said “it could have been any of us. The fella just wanted to formally surrender to someone.” And thats about all I got. But seeing as he was an 18 year old kid tossed into that mess I can only imagine what that was like.

Other items ill grab some pics of later that he had stashed away that we didnt even find until he died were numerous knives and bayonets (numerous ones marked in austrian amd german and a couple that fit perfectly on the Mauser mentioned in the other thread), knuckles, uniform cuff pins from german uniforms, coins, ect
 

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Moooore pics
 

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Few more here
 

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Few more pics
 

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And last ones
 

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That is a beautiful three lever Radom! I personally wouldn't shoot it a whole bunch because it is collectible but seems like your grandfather would want you to enjoy taking it to the range at least once in awhile. I'll be honest I have an all original 1944 M1 rifle that was never updated with all of its original World War II parts. I shoot it once a year, on Memorial Day to honor my grandfather's WWII service. The only thing I did was put a cut OP-rod in it so I didn't break the original operating rod.
 
That is a beautiful three lever Radom! I personally wouldn't shoot it a whole bunch because it is collectible but seems like your grandfather would want you to enjoy taking it to the range at least once in awhile. I'll be honest I have an all original 1944 M1 rifle that was never updated with all of its original World War II parts. I shoot it once a year, on Memorial Day to honor my grandfather's WWII service. The only thing I did was put a cut OP-rod in it so I didn't break the original operating rod.

Now I don't know what I'm more impressed by, the quality Vis 35 OP has posted or the fact that you have a non-rebuild M1 Garand.
 
Great VIS, thanks for posting photos. Very nice condition pistol and wonderful Steyr holster.

These are rock solid pistols and I wouldn't have a problem with shooting it occasionally. The weak spot is the grips though. They can crack when shot. Maybe consider a set of repros for range trips just to be extra safe.
 
That is a beautiful three lever Radom! I personally wouldn't shoot it a whole bunch because it is collectible but seems like your grandfather would want you to enjoy taking it to the range at least once in awhile. I'll be honest I have an all original 1944 M1 rifle that was never updated with all of its original World War II parts. I shoot it once a year, on Memorial Day to honor my grandfather's WWII service. The only thing I did was put a cut OP-rod in it so I didn't break the original operating rod.


Thank you sir! And yeah thats the extent it will ever be shot. Maybe once every year or two tops!
 
Really nice holster and pistol. As others have warned, I wouldn't shoot it either. I know it's fun to, but the fact is that these weren't built in the best of conditions and not the best materials. In fact some were sabotaged to where certain parts could have been over heat treated or under heat treated. And, the fact that it's been almost 80 years since it was built. The age on top of all that. Grips could crack and bust too. If the unthinkable happens one day at the range, you won't be able to go back and fix it. The damage will be done, the part will always be the part that was either "fixed" or replaced. If you really want to shoot one, just find a decent shooter grade VIS and blast away with it. They are out there to buy at pretty decent prices.

Anyway, just wanted to throw that out there and say it is a neat pistol rig.
 
The pistol is extremely nice, it almost looks as made yesterday. Impossible to upgrade! Your grandfather really cared well for it - now it is up to you to preserve it further!
 
The pistol is extremely nice, it almost looks as made yesterday. Impossible to upgrade! Your grandfather really cared well for it - now it is up to you to preserve it further!

Indeed. And I'd shoot it with about the same frequency that you shoot your M1 rifle. Years ago I knew a guy who shot his dad's bring-back Radom quite a bit. It wasn't nearly as nice as yours, but it was still a good matching piece. One day he was shooting rapid, when one discharge "didn't sound right". You guessed it, he had a BIB (bullet-in-bore). Rather than cease fire and inspect, he pressed the trigger again -- dumb-a$$.

The barrel split in front of the chamber, and he was proud to tell me that "the gun still works! When the barrel bushing runs into the bulged and split portion of the tube, the slide sticks to the rear. So all I have to do is hit the rear of the slide with the heel of my hand, and it runs forward to chamber the subsequent round!" Needless to say, I was aghast.

He eventually found a replacement barrel with a lousy bore, and of course a mismatched number. Scratch one more collectable Nazi-marked Radom.

Richie
 
..Rather than cease fire and inspect, he pressed the trigger again -- dumb-a$$.

Of course he did. Man there are some real geniuses out there. Everybody's an ekspurt. That's how the pros do it right? Just blast the squib out of the barrel. :googlie

..Scratch one more collectable Nazi-marked Radom.

Yup. Reference this to the question the other day about shooting their collectible 98k. I hate saying 'yes' because when doofus shoots scorching hot 80 year old machine gun ammo and his gun blows up it's my fault.
 

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