Absolut
Senior Member
First of all, I promise this to be my last thread for today, anyway had taken me way too much time to take and then rework all these pictures. But this one is very important to document, also for the future, and therefore I decided to go for almost every stamp that I can find that I think of to be important.
So this is a Gew98 style rifle, made by Mauser in 1902, as visible on the receiver ring. The rifle does not have the Gew98 designation on the side wall, for being different. The caliber is 6mm Mauser (6x58mm), so same caliber as the experimental Mauser 1896 rifle serial number 7 that I have posted in here --> https://www.k98kforum.com/threads/w...erndorf-a-n-1896-rifle-serial-number-7.59877/ .
At the very beginning, to have it mentioned too: this rifle here is serial number 10 on the receiver and the bolt. Every other part of the rifle has the serial number 1 stamped on it only. And after I have cleaned it today and when looking at the serial 10 very closeup I feel that this rifle originally may have been serial number 1 on all parts (so the 1 not just being an assembly number), someone just added the 0 to some of the parts - for whatever reason. Since it is former Mauser Factory collection as well as having been returned by the French (see the stamp to the stock) maybe Jon - who is aware of this rifle already - can check the French list with which serial they have listed it? Could well had been that the 0 was added at a much ealier point, but maybe also as late as with Mauser post WWII.
Also, this rifle has had a damage. The spring holding the front barrel band was broken off, and the front barrel band was missing. I replaced the broken spring, and for the meantime put a later H style front barrel band without the hook on the rifle that doesn't have any serial on it. I would need a Gew98 style with the hook. So this is NOT original to the rifle!
The particular rifle on this thread has quite a lot of differences, therefore to make it easier for me just a listing of some of the details that I'd want to point out:
- tangent rear sight different due to different caliber I assume
- various acceptance stamps (military?) on the small parts
- note the barrel does NOT have any steps! (edit, to be precise, refering to the barrel contour)
- there once was a sticker to the bottom of the stock, on purpose didn't clean off the rest of the sticker - whatever it may had been
- there even is an acceptance stamp to the top of the handguard and front of the front sight
- there are only two very small stock stamps behind the trigger guard. The stock does not have any external serial number
- the serial of the stock is hand written with a pencil to the barrel channel with 1, and additionally the 1 is stamped to the area that is covered by the handguard - handguard too has serial 1 inside
- the stock on the left side has the "French Return Number", from when the French gave Mauser back the factory collection of rifles
- behind the buttplate I was able to locate a stamp depicting a crown with a scripted A under it - does anyone have an idea on who used this stamp? A friend had suggested maybe Sachsen, Friedrich August (der Starke)
- the bayonet lug is unique for the inside being cut to the wood, see pictures
- magazine guard, they even bothered to stamp the flat spring with an acceptance stamp
- there is something in front of the trigger that is "just" spring loaded putting pressure forward. Therefore magazine guard is also cut for this. I assume maybe for the 6x58mm round in a 8x57 magazine?
- the barrel also has the serial/assembly number (whatever it may now be) 1 stamped, just behind the woodline - it is tough to make out since it is located in about the only rust pitting the rifle has
- the barrel also has a (commercial?) firing proof, I assume 5,88mm / 6,18mm refers to fields and lands?
- firing pin is unique shaped
- bolt is very different - it doesn't have the typical Mauser super long extractor, but one that is short and integrated to the bolt body
- bolt head is also recess cut for the 6mm round
So this is a Gew98 style rifle, made by Mauser in 1902, as visible on the receiver ring. The rifle does not have the Gew98 designation on the side wall, for being different. The caliber is 6mm Mauser (6x58mm), so same caliber as the experimental Mauser 1896 rifle serial number 7 that I have posted in here --> https://www.k98kforum.com/threads/w...erndorf-a-n-1896-rifle-serial-number-7.59877/ .
At the very beginning, to have it mentioned too: this rifle here is serial number 10 on the receiver and the bolt. Every other part of the rifle has the serial number 1 stamped on it only. And after I have cleaned it today and when looking at the serial 10 very closeup I feel that this rifle originally may have been serial number 1 on all parts (so the 1 not just being an assembly number), someone just added the 0 to some of the parts - for whatever reason. Since it is former Mauser Factory collection as well as having been returned by the French (see the stamp to the stock) maybe Jon - who is aware of this rifle already - can check the French list with which serial they have listed it? Could well had been that the 0 was added at a much ealier point, but maybe also as late as with Mauser post WWII.
Also, this rifle has had a damage. The spring holding the front barrel band was broken off, and the front barrel band was missing. I replaced the broken spring, and for the meantime put a later H style front barrel band without the hook on the rifle that doesn't have any serial on it. I would need a Gew98 style with the hook. So this is NOT original to the rifle!
The particular rifle on this thread has quite a lot of differences, therefore to make it easier for me just a listing of some of the details that I'd want to point out:
- tangent rear sight different due to different caliber I assume
- various acceptance stamps (military?) on the small parts
- note the barrel does NOT have any steps! (edit, to be precise, refering to the barrel contour)
- there once was a sticker to the bottom of the stock, on purpose didn't clean off the rest of the sticker - whatever it may had been
- there even is an acceptance stamp to the top of the handguard and front of the front sight
- there are only two very small stock stamps behind the trigger guard. The stock does not have any external serial number
- the serial of the stock is hand written with a pencil to the barrel channel with 1, and additionally the 1 is stamped to the area that is covered by the handguard - handguard too has serial 1 inside
- the stock on the left side has the "French Return Number", from when the French gave Mauser back the factory collection of rifles
- behind the buttplate I was able to locate a stamp depicting a crown with a scripted A under it - does anyone have an idea on who used this stamp? A friend had suggested maybe Sachsen, Friedrich August (der Starke)
- the bayonet lug is unique for the inside being cut to the wood, see pictures
- magazine guard, they even bothered to stamp the flat spring with an acceptance stamp
- there is something in front of the trigger that is "just" spring loaded putting pressure forward. Therefore magazine guard is also cut for this. I assume maybe for the 6x58mm round in a 8x57 magazine?
- the barrel also has the serial/assembly number (whatever it may now be) 1 stamped, just behind the woodline - it is tough to make out since it is located in about the only rust pitting the rifle has
- the barrel also has a (commercial?) firing proof, I assume 5,88mm / 6,18mm refers to fields and lands?
- firing pin is unique shaped
- bolt is very different - it doesn't have the typical Mauser super long extractor, but one that is short and integrated to the bolt body
- bolt head is also recess cut for the 6mm round
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