In fact, the new A-5 is a completely different gun – every part has been altered, customized or completely replaced to make it a better weapon in every way.
![Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers](https://image.invaluable.com/housePhotos/cordierantiques/41/433041/H4091-L51778505.jpg)
![Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers](https://www.gunafrica.co.za/files/03-2019/ad15394/listing-629246620_large.jpeg)
The Kinematic Drive is ultra-reliable and harnesses recoil energy which converts into the mechanical motion needed to operate the action.
#FN BELGIAN MAUSER SERIAL NUMBERS PRO#
Browning also manufactures a set of trap shotguns such as the 725 Pro Trap, Citori CX series and the Cynergy series.
![Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers Fn Belgian Mauser Serial Numbers](https://64.media.tumblr.com/3fb780d2073c1d075ad777d0e448394d/447d5ffdc290af05-3c/s640x960/8bf0a7f797ebbd991c919e1accc30d3c2abfaf1a.jpg)
But apparently this is not the case and the Sako-Mausers use a. At any rate, I was a little bit hesitant to buy any of the very few 8圆0 Sako-Mausers I've come across due to the non-"S" designation, fearing that the bore (groove diameter) would be the oddball. Since the 8圆0 actually came along between WW-I and WW-II (it was "invented" to avoid breaking the WW-I treaty which prohibited Germany from producing military calibers, ie., the 7.92x57/8x57), it was post-adoption of the "S" bore, so maybe it simply went by "8圆0" instead of always using the designation "8圆0s". 318" groove diameter of the original 7.92x57 Mauser before it was changed to the "S" bore ("spitzer") measuring. The difference is that the 8圆0 supposedly has the "J" (infantry). Just a note on the Sako-Mausers: The 8圆0 was listed, and is what is stamped on the rifles so chambered, however, the information I've received is that the Sako-Mausers were actually 8圆0s.