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Hungarian Infantry Trial Rifles 1923 |
The trials were cancelled and the projects were abandoned due to WW1, and the
Mannlicher M95 production was restarted.
One of the rifle variants entered for the Austrian trials was a
Mannlicher 14.M designated straight pull Mannlicher,
in 7x57mm caliber
The reasons to convert to an improved infantry weapon and ammunition still
existed after WW1. Hungarian weapon designers at Fegyver és Gépgyár, Budapest,
under Rudolf Frommer's leadership submitted an updated
version of the 14.M rifle with the 'Mannlicher 23.M' designation, in 7.92x57mm caliber,
for trials to the newly independent Hungarian Army.

An unknown quantity was manufactured for trial purposes by Fegyver és Gépgyár, Budapest, 1923
Caliber: 7.92x57mm rimless
Integral charger-loaded box magazine, 5 rounds
Straight pull bolt action, locked by rotating lugs on the bolt head into the receiver
1110mm [43.7"] overall, 3.6kg [8 lbs]
600mm [23.6"] barrel, rifling RH, concentric
Tangent type rear sight, graduated 300-2000 meters
Muzzle velocity 840 m/sec
4-edge Spike Bayonet or Riedl folding bayonet
The receiver was marked with 'BUDAPEST' in an arc, and '23M' below it.
This rifle's barrel length was in between the old M95 rifle's and carbine's
length. It was chambering the 7.92x57 rimless Mauser cartridge. The magazine was
internal, Mauser-type, with a floorplate, without a protruding magazine. The
receiver is machined to accept Mauser-type stripper clips. The M.95 bolthead and extractor
was altered to accomodate the 7.92mm rimless cartridge. The rifle's forestock
and handguard reached almost to the muzzle, and ended in an SMLE type front
band, which also acted as a bayonet lug and front sight protector. The sling
swivels were on the left side of the stock and rear band, in Carbine style.
The Riedl System folding bayonet of the 14.M was substituted with a removable Lebel mounting
style bayonet with a 4-edge spike bayonet. (This bayonet was eventually accepted for
the 35.M rifle.) Another 23M specimen was reportedly with the original M.14 Riedl folding bayonet
and a 2-piece 35.M style (or 33.M style?) buttstock. This leads me to believe that several different
variations of these prototypes were made.
A sliding dust cover was introduced, similar to the Japanese Arisaka
and Siamese Mauser rifles. This dust cover was also used in a later
Mannlicher 33.M turn bolt prototype rifle. The new 23.M rifles
ballistics were similar to the Mauser carbines' (like the M1922 and VZ24), with the benefits of the
faster straigth pull action.
Unfortunately Hungary (after the the devastation of WW1, after the 1919
Communist Revolution, after its neighbors' attacks and landgrabbings, after the
unjust Trianon decision) was not in a position economically and politically to
adopt and re-tool for a new weapon and ammunition.
A new ammunition (8x56r) was adopted 8 years later, along with the
Mannlicher 31.M rifles. A brand new
Mannlicher 35.M rifle was adopted in 1935, along with
the bayonet from the 23.M trial rifle.
Sources:
Research by Horváth János, article published by the Hungarian Ministry of Defense in the 1960's.