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m TXGRunner moved page Talk:Type 45 Siamese Mauser to Talk:Siamese Mauser style rifle: Per talk discussion, corrects type error and covers multiple models.
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Revision as of 18:39, 20 April 2018

Move Page Proposal - Rename to Siamese Mauser or Type 46 Siamese Mauser

Based on research, I am proposing the page be retitled "Siamese Mauser" or "Type 46 Siamese Mauser."

The rifles are marked ร,ศ,๑๒๑ (R.S. 121, for 121st year of Chakri Dynasty) which equates to Bhuddist year 2446 (1903).[1][2] Later, when Siam changed official documentation to use the Bhuddist year for dates, the rifles were referred to as 'type' or 'model' 46 in official records.[2] "Type 45" refers to the 8x50 rimmed cartridge adopted by Siam in the Bhuddist year 2445 (1902).[1][2] Many incorrectly refer to the rifle as "Type 45" when, in fact, it is a Type 46 rifle using the Type 45 cartridge.[1][1]

The current page refers to the specific model as originally issued. However, when the Siamese military decided to adopt a spitzer bullet in 1923, they adopted a modified cartridge (8x52 rimmed) identified as the Type 66 cartridge.[1] The existing Type 46 rifles were re-chambered for the new cartridge and became known as Type 46/66 rifles.[1][3] The sights were milled down slightly for the new trajectory, but the rifle designation on the receiver bridge was not changed.[1] The Type 46/66 rifles should not be confused with the Type 66 rifles which were the Japanese Type 38 rifle chambered for the 8x52 rimmed Siamese Type 66 cartridge ordered by Siam in 1923.[2]

Given the limited sources and detailed information available, I propose the page be re-titled "Siamese Mauser" with separate sections for the Type 46, Type 46/66, and Type 66 rifles. This is consistent with similar pages like the Japanese Type 38 rifle, which includes sections on the Type 44 carbine and Type 97 sniper rifle, and the M1903 Springfield page, which includes information on the M1903 Mark I, M1903-A3, and M1903-A4.

I will also post a note in Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Firearms referring to this talk for discussion before the changing the title. TXGRunner (talk) 00:11, 15 April 2018 (UTC)TXGrunner[reply]

Don't know anything about the rifle, but I wanted to point out that the year R.S. 121 corresponds to B.E. 2445 and 1902 CE (more specifically, April 1902 to March 1903). --Paul_012 (talk) 06:53, 15 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the information. I looked it up on other Wikipedia articles, on various calendar calculators/converters, and I am still showing the conversion as being 2446 and 1903. On the Thai solar calendar page it states "The epoch (reference date) for Year 1 was 6 April 1782 with the accession of Rama I...". Adding 121 yields 1903, although I grant there is overlap because the Thai New Year is in April. Further in the text, 1888 is equated with R.S. 106 (adding 15 to both yields 1903 and R.S. 121 respectively). Finally, in the picture provided of the 2004 calendar, the Thai Buddhist year is 2547 (subtracting 101 yields 1903 and 2446 respectively). When I look at Thai Buddhist calendar coverters DateConverter.net or Calendar-Converter.com 2446 is converted to 1903. I did find one calculator that explained for Thai dates, one year should be subtracted.[4] I think the Buddhist and Christian Era years are definitely 2446 and 1903 respectively as explained in the various sources listed. Given the overlap, as R.S. 121 covers part of both 1902 and 1903, the descrepancy could date back to 1903 or 1913 when the calendars were changed. According to the three sources I have, Thai documents identify the rifle as the Type or Model 46.
This issue can be worked out in the main article as additional sources validating R.S. 121 as 2445/1902 or 2446/1903 are presented. I still think we should move the page to reflect all Saimese Mausers.TXGRunner (talk) 18:58, 15 April 2018 (UTC)TXGRunner[reply]
You have to add 1781 to the R.S. year to get CE, not 1782, since there was no year zero. This is a mistake made by many. Part of the text also seems to have this wrong, which is part of why I'm bringing it up. --Paul_012 (talk) 19:02, 15 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and while I still haven't been able to find clear info on the various types, your proposal indeed seems reasonable. --Paul_012 (talk) 19:16, 15 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • I made the changes to the article content described above. I think I successfully navigated the issue relating to the dating between R.S., BE, and CE so nothing is inaccurate, but the text reflects the sources. I added sections for each rifle variant, added a section for ammunition, and added several sources. I'd appreciate anybody opening a discussion on any points before reverting or deleting sections, or enforcing major style/format changes. I welcome any grammar/spelling corrections.

_________________________

Hello TXGRunner, if you like to read it, let me explain some thoughts about it:

  • renaming it should be done in within some systematic logic - thus for single models or for groups of models aka "xxxxxx style rifle"
  • many east asian military stuff has a designation beginning with "Type XX" which has parallel parallel equivalents with western military stuff f.e. "Model 1909" or "M 1909" or "Model 09" or "Mark 09" or "VZ. 09" etc. Compare f.e. in Category:Mauser_rifles. The calculation of "XX" depends on chinese, japanese, siamese etc. timesystems. "Type XX" is a transcription of signs which are normally not common to us - but it has it's roots in the original description of the material. Normally we have for most of the firearms the name (or an abbreviation) of the manufacturer at the beginning, as we can see it with Colt-AR 15, Bushmaster XM-15, Smith & Wesson M&P15 etc. for military variants we know M16A1, M16A2, M16A4, M16A4 etc.

In literature you can find designations like:

What is the difference? f.e.:

  • Type 45 Siamese Mauser is a copy based on the Mauser system - the manufacturer is perhaps unknown (or in this case Manufacturer is "Koishikawa arsenal"). It is a "Mauser-Style-rifle" not made by Mauser as Manufacturer. In this case "Mauser" is the name of the person who was the developer. "Siamese" stands for the military forces who introduced and used this material.

Let us compare a wider known model, because Type 66 Siamese Mauser rifle was copy of the Arisaka type 38 (... what even makes it a bit more curious)

  • and more if you look at wikidata: [1]
    • ar تايب 38 (بندقية)
    • bg Тип 38 Арисака
    • cs Arisaka typ 38
    • de Arisaka Typ 38
    • en Type 38 rifle
    • es Fusil Tipo 38
    • et Arisaka M1905
    • fr Fusil Arisaka Type 38
    • hu Arisaka 38
    • it Type 38 (fucile)
    • ja 三八式歩兵銃
    • ko 38식 보병총
    • nl Type 38-geweer
    • no Type 38 rifle
    • pl Karabin wz. 38 Arisaka
    • ru Type 38 (винтовка)
    • sr Тип 38 Арисака
    • sv Arisaka 38
    • tr Type 38
    • uk Arisaka Type 38
    • vi Shiki 38 (súng trường)
    • zh 三八式步枪

In the article of this talk page there is more than one variant included. Lets list them:

  • Type 45 Siamese Mauser
  • Type 46 Siamese Mauser rifle (copy of the Swedish Mauser and Gewehr 98)
  • Type 47 Siamese Mauser carbine (copy of the Swedish Mauser and Gewehr 98)
  • Type 66 Siamese Mauser rifle (copy of the Arisaka type 38)
  • Type 46/66 Siamese Mauser rifle (rechambered Type 46)
  • Type 47/66 Siamese Mauser carbine (rechambered Type 47)

OK @TXGRunner: now lets come to an conclusion: I suppose to move this article to Siamese Mauser (or comparing to AR-15 style rifle) perhaps better to Siamese Mauser style rifle if you like the second. In each case I strongly recommend to establish redirects for the known sub models. In my opinion using this as a schematic can be useful also for other similar articles. I hope this little research and my thoughts are helpful. Best --Tom (talk) 18:28, 18 April 2018 (UTC)[reply]

_________________________ Tom, thanks much for your input and explanation. I will go with Siamese Mauser style rifle. If somebody objects, we can tweak it later. Except for the Type 66, they all use the same receiver, but there are four designations. Only the chambering changed.

I saw the one redirect. I don't know how that works. I will try to figure it out once I change the title.

Thanks again, TXGRunner (talk) 18:37, 20 April 2018 (UTC)TXGRunner[reply]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Unlisted, Othais. "Rifle: Thai Mausers Type 46 and 46/66". C&Rsenal. C&Rsenal. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d McCollum, Ian. "Siamese Mauser Followup – the Type 66 Rifle". Forgotten Weapons. Forgotten Weapons. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  3. ^ McCollum, Ian. "Type 46 Siamese Mauser". Forgotten Weapons. Forgotten Weapons. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  4. ^ "Simple Buddhist-Christian Era Conversion Forms". Ancient Buddhist Texts. Ancient Buddhist Texts. Retrieved 15 April 2018.