The sights consisted of a triangular front blade protected by beefy wings, and a rear ladder-style sight that was graduated to 2,000 meters on the carbine version. The rifles came from the factory with sliding sheet-steel dust covers, but these were frequently discarded by troops in the field as they rattled as they got loose.
The stock was somewhat blocky in shape, and the butt was of two pieces fitted together tongue-and-groove style, which allowed stocks to be made from smaller blanks. RIGHT: The front sight was drift-adjustable for windage, and was protected by sturdy "wings". Ackley considered the Type 38 to be the strongest military rifle action he'd ever tested. The rifle handled escaping gas from a ruptured case very well, being equipped with both gas vent holes in the receiver ring and a large round knob on the rear that doubled as both a safety and a flange to direct gas away from the firer's face. Arisaka's rifle was made in both rifle and carbine formats and had several innovative features, some more useful than others. LEFT: The knurled knob on the rear of the bolt served as both a safety and a gas-deflecting flange. He trumped this design eight years later with a rugged rifle based on the Spanish M1893 Mauser, known as the Type 38 Arisaka, (Type 38 refers to the 38th year of the Meiji Restoration, with 1868 being Year 1.) This rifle would go on to serve as the primary Japanese service rifle for the next thirty-four years, and remained in production in some factories until the Japanese surrender in 1945.
When Japan shocked the world by beating a European power in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904, they were equipped with a new rifle designed by a Colonel Nariaki Arisaka in 1897.
32 Regulation Police, 1918ĪBOVE: Arisaka Type 38 Cavalry Carbine, photo by Oleg Volk. Arisaka Type 38 Cavalry Carbine: A Samurai Mauser.