Now that’s very interesting.
Nick Ive never seen a safety like that, have you? Un-numbered with a strange acceptance stamp on the underside.Interesting it has the e/H on the stock, I think there were some rifles from BLM that got re-routed to the Navy after Army acceptance in 1940, would have to check the books. Nice
Correct, there's a '39 b block divert in the book.Interesting it has the e/H on the stock, I think there were some rifles from BLM that got re-routed to the Navy after Army acceptance in 1940, would have to check the books. Nice find! Navy guns are not common.
Nick
Volume IIb has an example of a RR with (4) 214 stamps, "indicating an additional inspection required to pass this receiver."Interesting to me they're still running 4 acceptance on RR in d block of '40. Looks like from what I see almost everything has acceptance.
Congrats on such a lucky find, I never seem to find anything in my online searches. Radom parts weren't really in mainstream use with Steyr until 1941, it's not common to find Radom made parts used on 1940 Steyr made K98ks though they do exist, especially in the later blocks."40 237 748 e WaA214, NIM, Nazi FP, Matching, Navy Marked Takedown Washer"
Above from the SN# Study List On BLM. Close example, must be know others in 1940. No examples in the sticky however.
This one was a single gun walk-in at a pawn shop today on the West Coast. I just happened to be online at the right time. No other small parts indicate a re-work, and everything else matches. I know several Steyer 1940 660 code rifles were obtained by the Kreigsmarine...maybe spare parts on hand?
Well at first it looked like a nice Army BLM rifle. After a request for additional photos I seen the stock disk markings. I ran straight home and slung myself into my newley aquired Vol. IIb.....and there it was, Kreigsmarine Divert Rifles. Wish there was a little more info on the use of these rifles within the Navy. I'm guessing surviving examples were either depot stock or from Costal Artillery Units.Nice, uncommon rifle. I think the heer acceptance with KM property marked disk make it really interesting. Without looking in the book, if I found it I probably would have paused on it thinking something was wrong.
It's a legit Kriegsmarine K98k and like already mentioned, N indicates North Sea Fleet. There are BLM Kriegsmarine diverts in 1939 and some in 1940, all have e/H on the stock.Nick Ive never seen a safety like that, have you? Un-numbered with a strange acceptance stamp on the underside.
In 1940 I know "237 1940" coded BLM K98k's in the "d", "e" and "f"block.Above from the SN# Study List On BLM. Close example, must be know others in 1940. No examples in the sticky however.