This rifle sat on my wall for almost a decade until this weekend, when it caught my eye while I was home on special liberty. I know almost nothing about Mausers, so I was hoping someone could get me a little more info on it aside from date an location of manufacture. Any takers?
So I've got this old gun... (Mauser Mod98k BYF41 all matching)
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More pictures available on request... I've got the gun covered from just about every angle! -
Lets see….
Laminated stock with a flat butt plate.
Originally issued to the "Heer" (German Army)
Manufactured by Mauser Werke A.G., Oberndorf-am-Neckar
Need a lot more pictures of numbers to verify "all Matching" (trigger guard, screws, safety, firing pin, barrel bands, bolt shroud, top of receiver, etc).
Sling is not installed correctly, it is on the wrong side ( should be on the left side of the weapon), middle band is also installed incorrectly.
D.
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Bore is clean and bright.
These are all the pictures I and my father took: http://imageshack.us/g/834/barrellhdetail.jpg/
Hope that helps!
Note that I'm absolutely not looking to value this rifle for sale, I plan to pass it down as it was passed down to me. Any tips for preservation are greatly appreciated.Comment
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Gentleman.
I pointed SempreFortis here, so he could get *excellent* information. But I did find something out, Doing a Mauser Markins info search I found a info page that pointed out that German armorers were issued lots of repair parts and a marking kit, to punch in the sn of *REPLACEMENT* parts of guns they worked on. (sorry lost the url). So. *matcing numbers* on a german ww2 weapon, doesn't mean much more than the parts were either oem or German Military Armorer replaced.
RHBComment
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What a nice example. Too bad rifles in that condition rarely show up in my neck of woods. All I seem to find are the 'ratted out' examples.Comment
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The Armorers number stamps would seldom match the original on the rifle, numbers sometimes varied from maker to maker. Plus replacement parts were hand stamped and usually slightly out of line. And weather they were stamped at all depended on the level of maintenece, at depot level yes, unit level no. In fact unit level repair usually involed parts taken fron unrepairable rifles, so are m/m. Re stamped parts are almost always obvious if you are fimilar with the rifles and various makers and have seen many of them. Plus there are other ways to tell if a part is original, are they correct style for year and maker? Is the WaA number the same as rest of rifle? is it correct number? does it even have a WaA number if it is supposed to? German K98k's are a very complicated rifles as far as collectors are concerned. Impossible to fool a knowledgeable collector with a 'put-together', as can be done with US WW11 arms!Gentleman.
I pointed SempreFortis here, so he could get *excellent* information. But I did find something out, Doing a Mauser Markins info search I found a info page that pointed out that German armorers were issued lots of repair parts and a marking kit, to punch in the sn of *REPLACEMENT* parts of guns they worked on. (sorry lost the url). So. *matcing numbers* on a german ww2 weapon, doesn't mean much more than the parts were either oem or German Military Armorer replaced.
RHBLast edited by dave; 02-20-2012, 05:47.You can never go home again.Comment
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Nice piece! Anybody know what the "P" on the butt stock aft of the pistol grip means? My duv 41 has the same mark.This rifle sat on my wall for almost a decade until this weekend, when it caught my eye while I was home on special liberty. I know almost nothing about Mausers, so I was hoping someone could get me a little more info on it aside from date an location of manufacture. Any takers?Comment
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I looked in B of the W and the P mark on stocks is not mentioned, I have seen that also but have no idea. Very early K98k's had a K stamped on bottom ahead of the TG. That stood for kutz or short, as the small k in the model number. The Kar.98b had a 29" barrel, remember.You can never go home again.Comment

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