My Belgian FN 98 safety

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Art
    Senior Member, Deceased
    • Dec 2009
    • 9256

    #16
    Here is a tutorial on disassembling (the video title incorrectly says "removing") a Mauser 98 bolt with a Buehler safety.

    Last edited by Art; 06-21-2023, 11:47.

    Comment

    • fguffey
      Senior Member
      • May 2012
      • 684

      #17
      A few years ago I was asked to clean-out, sort and separate and then organize the contents of an off campus office of a professor. I thought he should have started years earlier, I did not think he should have waited until I approached 80 years and he approached 90. I accepted the request with the understanding I knew what he wanted done with the his life time of work. This included the contents of his shop at his home in Denton, Texas. At the same time I was asked if I was interested in making an offer on the contents of parts , tools and merchandise from his partners shop. Seems others were asked to make offers but the offers were too low.

      In the mix were 6 rifles that he had built but were returned for various reasons. I went through them to identify the problems. one had a a right handed safety. I went through all of his bolt Mauser parts and found enough parts to build 3 right hand safety bolts; meaning he purchased three 3 Mausers with right hand safeties. Nothing was predrilled, one rifle was drilled and tapped incorrectly, that one I had to align the Buller base and rear ring, to avoid adding holes I used a spacer with longer/shorter screws. The was one increasable accurate rifle. The rifle came to me with a scope with a short tuber, the bells on the scope did not fit the rings so I used a very long scope, I liked the looks of the rifle and the glass was very clear. No one complained, I did not charge them and I gave them the short scope as in JIC, 'Just in case some one wanted to argue'

      And then there was the rifle with the stuck JAG. I found a bullet ahead of the jag and a .250" drill bit broken off and stuck in the barrel ahead of the bullet. I was told I could stick a 257 barrel on the rifle and then be done with it. I had a 7MM Remington Mag barrel that was identical in profile and length to the 257 Weatherby. Problem, the barrel was not tight meaning hot high pressure cutting gas cut the face the face of the barrel 'C' ring.

      William T. Watts came for a visit at that time. We took out time to find an antenna for his radios.

      F. Guffey

      Comment

      • dryheat
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 10587

        #18
        More safeties:
        I have a Parker-Hale .243 that has a safety on the custom trigger. Kind of like the case & dime trick used above you cock the bolt, remove it from the rifle and then using some Delrin material (in the picture) you pull the action back far enough to put a little pin in a hole. Then you can separate the pieces.

        DSC00392.jpg

        About the safety: I think it's awful. Looks like something you would put on a pellet rifle.
        DSC00388-2.jpg
        Ready to fire.

        DSC00389-2.jpg
        Safety stops here. Is is safe? NO

        DSC00390-2.jpg
        With some effort you "go over the click"
        and cover the red dot. Now it's safe. Before I lubed it I needed a screw driver to get it all the way back.
        It's still hard to move and I can see how someone might just pull it halfway and "feel" like it's back. A rinky dink safety in my opinion.

        Oh, but I love this rifle.
        Last edited by dryheat; 06-23-2023, 02:03.
        If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

        Comment

        • fguffey
          Senior Member
          • May 2012
          • 684

          #19
          Many years ago I had no interest in becoming the Mauser expert on safeties. I did find members that became experts on the South American rifle with the safety that was different. I was told they had an instructor that required the shooter to stick their nose up and on top of the safety. I understand he had complaints from shooters so he had the safety moved to the right side and everyone lived happily ever after. Anyhow, all of this happened before the Internet; back then when these rifles became available I had friends that did not know what held the safety in place. I asked, where is the safety, he replied; "In my pocket".

          F. Guffey.

          Comment

          • fguffey
            Senior Member
            • May 2012
            • 684

            #20
            ALERT…ALERT. You guys are trying to explain the correct position of the safety to someone who invented HEAD SPACE and has hundreds of gauges. Good luck..
            One small South American country ordered a 30/06 chambered Mauser with a right hand safety, the safety was a three position safety. They thought the safety that was designed to fire when on the left side was in the way and they thought it hindered accuracy. My opinion about sights and accuracy? I would choose a thin, skinny one ever time.

            F. Guffey

            That one little country ordered the rifles from FN.
            Last edited by fguffey; 06-30-2023, 07:58.

            Comment

            • fguffey
              Senior Member
              • May 2012
              • 684

              #21
              ALERT…ALERT. You guys are trying to explain the correct position of the safety to someone who invented HEAD SPACE and has hundreds of gauges. Good luck..
              One small South American country ordered a 30/06 chambered Mauser with a right hand safety, the safety was a three position safety. They thought the safety that was designed to fire when on the left side was in the way and they thought it hindered accuracy. My opinion about sights and accuracy? I would choose a thin, skinny one ever time.

              F. Guffey

              Comment

              • Vern Humphrey
                Administrator - OFC
                • Aug 2009
                • 15875

                #22
                Originally posted by fguffey
                One small South American country ordered a 30/06 chambered Mauser with a right hand safety, the safety was a three position safety. They thought the safety that was designed to fire when on the left side was in the way and they thought it hindered accuracy. My opinion about sights and accuracy? I would choose a thin, skinny one ever time.

                F. Guffey
                If I had designed the '03 Springfield, it would look like the '03A3, with a peep sight and a wider front sight, a gas baffle for the left raceway, and forged scope bases on the receiver -- with an appropriately bent bolt handle.

                Comment

                Working...