Late War Assembled ?

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  • Tdarmo
    Member
    • Jan 2014
    • 97

    #1

    Late War Assembled ?

    I was wondering how my BYF 44 got in a 1936 Mauser stock. Its not a capture. Stock wasn't cleaned up if Germans were doing late war anything goes assembles. Stock is numbers matching. Bolt numbers match. Reciever number doesn't match bolt.001.jpg002.jpg003.jpg004.jpg
  • rockisle1903
    Member
    • Dec 2014
    • 49

    #2
    sporterized rifle rescue...or the vet owned 2 rifles and mixed and matched...or...But the germans never did anything like this even on the repair level, most major components were renumbered to match..
    Last edited by rockisle1903; 01-18-2016, 09:53.

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    • dave
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 6778

      #3
      In 1943-44 Mauser made some rifles with new walnut stocks. I have never seen or heard where the wood came from, new blanks or NOS stocks. I once owned one and a friend has one now. What makes you say it is a 1936 stock?? Mine and friends had/have cupped butt plates tho. The Germans did a lot of things that are not in the books, what ever they could to get a rifle back on the line!
      And what car is that?????
      Last edited by dave; 01-19-2016, 07:53.
      You can never go home again.

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      • musketshooter
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 521

        #4
        It would be commonly referred to as a "parts gun". Certainly not a war time assembly.

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        • rockisle1903
          Member
          • Dec 2014
          • 49

          #5
          The Germans did a lot of things that are not in the books, what ever they could to get a rifle back on the line!

          Source? Besides an internet myth or gunbroker sales pitch to justify a mismatched rifle..They renumbered major components to match such as stock, bolts, barrels, receivers, floorplates, trigger guards, and bands...small bits such as sight parts, bolt "back half" assemblies mostly but not always..

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          • mike webb
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 1735

            #6
            a BYF 44 can be found with a walnut stock once in a while but not with a flat buttplate. All K98k's produced in 1944 would have had a cupped buttplate. Flat buttplates disappeared from use around 1942 from all manufacturers.

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            • dave
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2009
              • 6778

              #7
              Originally posted by rockisle1903
              The Germans did a lot of things that are not in the books, what ever they could to get a rifle back on the line!

              Source? Besides an internet myth or gunbroker sales pitch to justify a mismatched rifle..They renumbered major components to match such as stock, bolts, barrels, receivers, floorplates, trigger guards, and bands...small bits such as sight parts, bolt "back half" assemblies mostly but not always..
              Oh, those front line repair guys working out of a trailer took the time to restamp a band, floor plate, and all small parts? They kept good parts taken off ruined rifles and used them. Have you ever stamping a gun part by hand? Especially a hardened part? Try it sometime!
              You can never go home again.

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