French MAB Brevete Model D 7.65 mm

cwo4uscgret

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The wife and I spent the weekend at a gun show in the small resort town of Houghton Lake, MI, north of Saginaw off I-75. Sold one rifle and bought yet another smaller "pocket" pistol.

This is an interesting French MAB Brevete Model D chambered in 7.65mm aka .32 acp. An interesting history this model; MAB stands for Manufacture d'Armes de Bayonne and was made (in .32) from 1933 till 1963. It was also made in .380. During WWII when the Germans occupied France one of the cities that the laid claim to was Bayonne, mainly for the MAB factory.

Due to the war, there were several manufacturing runs that resulted in duplicate serial numbers; the real distinguishing clue to when a particular gun was made is the type of pistol; there are two variants. Type I pistols have a take down lever on the bottom front of the slide that fits into a notch on the barrel nut. Serial numbers for the Brevete Model D started in 1933 at serial number 10750; mine is 38648 so I assume it was pre-WWII made. Type Is were made until 1945; Type IIs until the end of production. My gun is a type I; not sure of the manufacture date; many of the German WWII guns have Waffenamt acceptance marks and usually the French government issued guns (Police, Bank of France), etc. were marked with alpha characters such as BF for the Bank of France…mine is devoid of marks other then serial number and model info. The holster has an unreadable name inside the flap and a stamped number. The magazine is interesting; it isn't a MAB factory magazine; it is marked in a script inside an oval FN 7.65.

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Very nice catch. I was supposed to be at that show this last week end but had family stuff to do.
Here's my Nazi marked Mab with it's issue holster. They are well made pistols.
Look carefully on the holster where the latching flap snaps up. Some times those Nazi marks are lightly stamped.
 

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Here's mine. It also is Nazi marked but has a MAB magazine. The holster DID NOT come with the pistol; I got it from another French collector. The holster is a cut down US M1916 holster for the 45; I believe the holster is actually FFI, and they carried anything in it that would fit, but I could very well be wrong on this.
 

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The magazine in the OP pistol looks like an FN M1922 mag.
Didn't know they'd fit, but the Model D was made w/ extended frame and mag capacity to compete w/the FN1922 at the time.
MAB kept the original slide of the Model C pistol though instead of adding an extension as FN did with the 1910 to 1922 Model change.
Nice pistol and holster!,,something about older 32auto pistols that still draws my attention and interest.
 
MAB made some interesting pistols.

If you have the hardcover edition of Peter O'Donnell's 1966 novel, "Modesty Blaise", it has a MAB .25 on it. That was one of several guns that Modesty carried in that series.

It looks a LOT like the FN-made M-1906 or the identical Colt .25, but lacks a grip safety.

There were Models A and B. You can probably find pics on the Net. For that matter, you can find photos of the books.

How reliable are these Modele D guns, and how accurate?
 
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