I have a DOT 1944 that I am trying to understand. Pictures are attached. Serial Number 6868, no letter block. Most parts appear to match, but I am trying to understand which parts have no numbers and should, which parts appear to be replacement, and when (approximately) this rifle was made during 1944, because it is so confusing to me how the serial numbering worked for Brunn 1 during 1944. So to the questions I have:
1) I know the stock has been sanded, and it looks like it was varnished at one point. It has no serial number (and neither does the handguard), but it does have the "DOT" on the heal, a Heer mark and a "7" in the sling slot. It is also dated October 24, 1944 in pencil (with someone's initials) under the butt plate. Could this be the original stock, or is it a replacement?
2) The barrel bands are stamped and unmarked. The finish appears to match the rifle, but it is unclear to me if they bands should be numbered for this rifle, and if the upper band should be a speed milled band or a stamped band.
3) The safety is not matching, but should the safety be numbered to the rifle or unnumbered?
4) The barrel appears to be a Ruhrstahl barrel (see the Waffenampt 13 on the Barrel, and it is stamped "AVK B" underneath). Was this likely the original barrel for this rifle, or could it have been an arsenal replacement of some sort?
5) Related to the above, the stock is not drilled for a cleaning rod, which I would assume makes sense if the rifle as made in October 1944, but perhaps not if made earlier. I am just confused as to when a four-digit, no letter block DOT 1944 was made. Sometimes, it seems like they may have been made early in 1944 (if no letter block rifles were made before the letter blocks started with "a"), and other times, I find folks saying that DOT 1944s started with the "v" letter block, then proceeded through the "aa-az" letter blocks, then went to no letter block, four-digits (like mine), then no letter block, five digits, then five digit letter blocks until the war ended. Can anyone help my confusion?
Sorry for my ignorance. I am relatively new to K98k rifles, and I am trying to learn. Anything else you can tell me about this rifle would be appreciated. I intended to have it as a shooter, but if it should not be treated that way, then please advise. First 10 pics below....More coming after that....
Thanks in advance. German firearms are fascinating!
1) I know the stock has been sanded, and it looks like it was varnished at one point. It has no serial number (and neither does the handguard), but it does have the "DOT" on the heal, a Heer mark and a "7" in the sling slot. It is also dated October 24, 1944 in pencil (with someone's initials) under the butt plate. Could this be the original stock, or is it a replacement?
2) The barrel bands are stamped and unmarked. The finish appears to match the rifle, but it is unclear to me if they bands should be numbered for this rifle, and if the upper band should be a speed milled band or a stamped band.
3) The safety is not matching, but should the safety be numbered to the rifle or unnumbered?
4) The barrel appears to be a Ruhrstahl barrel (see the Waffenampt 13 on the Barrel, and it is stamped "AVK B" underneath). Was this likely the original barrel for this rifle, or could it have been an arsenal replacement of some sort?
5) Related to the above, the stock is not drilled for a cleaning rod, which I would assume makes sense if the rifle as made in October 1944, but perhaps not if made earlier. I am just confused as to when a four-digit, no letter block DOT 1944 was made. Sometimes, it seems like they may have been made early in 1944 (if no letter block rifles were made before the letter blocks started with "a"), and other times, I find folks saying that DOT 1944s started with the "v" letter block, then proceeded through the "aa-az" letter blocks, then went to no letter block, four-digits (like mine), then no letter block, five digits, then five digit letter blocks until the war ended. Can anyone help my confusion?
Sorry for my ignorance. I am relatively new to K98k rifles, and I am trying to learn. Anything else you can tell me about this rifle would be appreciated. I intended to have it as a shooter, but if it should not be treated that way, then please advise. First 10 pics below....More coming after that....
Thanks in advance. German firearms are fascinating!
Attachments
-
K98 1.jpg168.7 KB · Views: 127
-
K98 2.jpg232.6 KB · Views: 132
-
K98 3.jpg200.6 KB · Views: 113
-
K98 4.jpg177.6 KB · Views: 107
-
K98 5.jpg170.4 KB · Views: 99
-
K98 6.jpg106.1 KB · Views: 97
-
K98 7.jpg152.3 KB · Views: 106
-
K98 8.jpg225 KB · Views: 114
-
K98 9.jpg121.9 KB · Views: 108
-
K98 10.jpg144.6 KB · Views: 123
Last edited: