How can i fix the area around recoil lug for my yugo 98k?

Frankly if you're in this to the tune of $1k already I'd either cut my losses and sell the project on or try a repair with the understanding that it might not hold. At that point I'd be tempted to go a little nuclear and de-grease the whole area like a madman then try to shore up the whole area with acraglass or something similar. But if you're not wanting to cut on wood that's not going to be an option for you, and if you're unsure of your abilities to handle it it's something that could make the situation worse.

At this point your first thought of degrease the whole thing and epoxy like mad might not be the worst, but if you're not willing to drill and put some supporting dowels in I wouldn't put high odds on it holding.

If it were mine I'd do something similar to what Honkey Tonk described above - bleed the cosmo out with a heat gun as much as possible, then hit the whole area with a ton of acetone. I'd probably go that over denatured alcohol just because it evaporates more readily. Then I'd get a syringe and some quality wood glue, fill the syringe, and squirt it as deep into the cracks as I could. Then I'd use a hammer and dowel to tap the broken piece of wood forward. Let that dry. If that's as far as you're comfortable going I'd stop there, but understand that it might not hold long term. Keep an eye on that area to check for the cracks reappearing.

If it was my gun (and keep in mind I'm far from a shop wizard, I'm just a well meaning idiot - so none of this is crazy on required skill or equipment) then I'd probably top it off by drilling a hole through the stock sideways (so left to right if you're looking at it from above, parallel to the recoil lug), get a hardwood dowel the same size as the hole, coat it with wood glue and tap it into the hole I just drilled. Basically creating a backstop to the recoil lug to help shore up the prior repair. Wait for that to dry, trim the dowel to be flush with the stock. If you do it carefully enough with a very sharp knife and maybe a piece of sand paper folded over something very thin like shim stock (using the thin side to remove tiny bits of dowel) you might not mark the stock around it. It would be visible, but not awful looking. Let that dry.

After that if I was really ambitious I'd fill the setback area inside the lug cutout with acraglass or something similar, put some release agent on the lug, and screw it back together. Basically bedding the lug. Pretty sure I read that tip here - I think from Herk. That's a bit touchier because if you don't use enough release agent the lug is in there forever, and if you screwed up placing it you've got a fused together mess.
 
I'm not trying to push you either direction. Take some time think it over. There will always be more for sale ECT.
It is a really nice looking piece.
My 2cents I don't know how much you could get for it being in the condition it is in. Probably not much more if you attempt to fix it and it goes bad. Either way the person buying it knows they will have to fix it.
Again not trying to push you to fix it just calling it how I see it.
You could always look locally for someone to fix it. I'd look more towards some with woodworking background than a gunsmith.
Other than the lug there is nothing else wrong with it. I still could do likely what I paid for it but I doubt I will be able to sell it either way, I have so much trouble selling shite in my area.
 
Frankly if you're in this to the tune of $1k already I'd either cut my losses and sell the project on or try a repair with the understanding that it might not hold. At that point I'd be tempted to go a little nuclear and de-grease the whole area like a madman then try to shore up the whole area with acraglass or something similar. But if you're not wanting to cut on wood that's not going to be an option for you, and if you're unsure of your abilities to handle it it's something that could make the situation worse.

At this point your first thought of degrease the whole thing and epoxy like mad might not be the worst, but if you're not willing to drill and put some supporting dowels in I wouldn't put high odds on it holding.

If it were mine I'd do something similar to what Honkey Tonk described above - bleed the cosmo out with a heat gun as much as possible, then hit the whole area with a ton of acetone. I'd probably go that over denatured alcohol just because it evaporates more readily. Then I'd get a syringe and some quality wood glue, fill the syringe, and squirt it as deep into the cracks as I could. Then I'd use a hammer and dowel to tap the broken piece of wood forward. Let that dry. If that's as far as you're comfortable going I'd stop there, but understand that it might not hold long term. Keep an eye on that area to check for the cracks reappearing.

If it was my gun (and keep in mind I'm far from a shop wizard, I'm just a well meaning idiot - so none of this is crazy on required skill or equipment) then I'd probably top it off by drilling a hole through the stock sideways (so left to right if you're looking at it from above, parallel to the recoil lug), get a hardwood dowel the same size as the hole, coat it with wood glue and tap it into the hole I just drilled. Basically creating a backstop to the recoil lug to help shore up the prior repair. Wait for that to dry, trim the dowel to be flush with the stock. If you do it carefully enough with a very sharp knife and maybe a piece of sand paper folded over something very thin like shim stock (using the thin side to remove tiny bits of dowel) you might not mark the stock around it. It would be visible, but not awful looking. Let that dry.

After that if I was really ambitious I'd fill the setback area inside the lug cutout with acraglass or something similar, put some release agent on the lug, and screw it back together. Basically bedding the lug. Pretty sure I read that tip here - I think from Herk. That's a bit touchier because if you don't use enough release agent the lug is in there forever, and if you screwed up placing it you've got a fused together mess.
I thought that a rifle that looks like a museum piece or at the vary least fresh out of the factory it wouldn't have so many issues with it.

The other yugo mauser I seen looks like it is in a rougher stock but I would still end up paying exactly what I payed for this one. Rus captures or other 98k's around me are all going for 1,000 or more same thing with anything US surplus and even some mosins are pushing 700. That's why I got a yugo they are supposed to be really good guns and they were supposed to be in pretty much untouched condition. But I guess that's what I get for punching above my weight class in this stuff, I'm kinda out priced on alot of guns I like even a m16a1 is really expensive.
 
I thought that a rifle that looks like a museum piece or at the vary least fresh out of the factory it wouldn't have so many issues with it.

The other yugo mauser I seen looks like it is in a rougher stock but I would still end up paying exactly what I payed for this one. Rus captures or other 98k's around me are all going for 1,000 or more same thing with anything US surplus and even some mosins are pushing 700. That's why I got a yugo they are supposed to be really good guns and they were supposed to be in pretty much untouched condition. But I guess that's what I get for punching above my weight class in this stuff, I'm kinda out priced on alot of guns I like even a m16a1 is really expensive.
The yugos in basically untouched condition are the assorted M48 rifles. A lot of those got put into storage basically new. Not all of them, you can find some that saw use in the Yugo civil wars, but high condition ones aren't hard to find. The Yugo K98ks were all refurbs of wartime produced and used rifles, and so they're going to exhibit the same basic set of problems that you find in wartime K98ks.

If prices are that bad around you I'd really recommend looking online. Ordering a gun online is annoying, but really you just have to find a local FFL who will do a transfer for a reasonable amount. Gunbroker is always going to be a little fraught, but looking at it right now I'm seeing M48's for $700 all day long and chances are if you didn't want to just slam buy it now today you could get something a few bills cheaper with a little browsing.

Guns in general aren't a cheap hobby. If you're looking to do military firearms you're really going to want to get comfortable with buying online. Swedish mausers are all of really high quality and can be had pretty easily for sub-$800. Swiss rifles in general are also high quality and can be had for about what a Swede goes for. The assorted Italian and Austro-Hungarian guns get a lot less love and can be had for reasonable prices. Japanese weapons are also shockingly affordable compared to German, are fun to collect, and tend to be good shooters to boot.
 
Also, don't forget the trader here. I'm willing to bet that if you posted a WTB for a decent, shooter K98k with a budget of $900-ish, someone would have something that would fit the bill. Tack on ~100 for shipping and a transfer at your FFL and you're in it for under $1k.
 
The final thing I'll add is that old military guns is a hobby where it really, REALLY helps to get comfortable tinkering. Frankly this gun is going to be a good learning experience as far as teaching yourself to do stock repairs. It's not dead simple, but it's also not crazy complex. It's also a good example of something that's worth repairing but isn't so priceless that you need to be terrified of screwing it up.

The good news is that this is a pretty helpful community, and this is a good place to pick up some of those tricks.
 
Also, don't forget the trader here. I'm willing to bet that if you posted a WTB for a decent, shooter K98k with a budget of $900-ish, someone would have something that would fit the bill. Tack on ~100 for shipping and a transfer at your FFL and you're in it for under $1k.
I was checking the trader when I was looking for a 98 before I found this one, and still they were all way out of my price range. Right now I'm thinking I probably should just cut my loses and just be one of the regular people with only a glock and an AR as boring and samey as it is.
 
I was checking the trader when I was looking for a 98 before I found this one, and still they were all way out of my price range. Right now I'm thinking I probably should just cut my loses and just be one of the regular people with only a glock and an AR as boring and samey as it is.
Your call, but I'd still say haunting gunbroker for a M48 is a pretty solid way to get into a shooter mauser-pattern rifle.
 
Your call, but I'd still say haunting gunbroker for a M48 is a pretty solid way to get into a shooter mauser-pattern rifle.
There out there. Just gotta put the time in. These ended in the last 45 days.
 

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Your call, but I'd still say haunting gunbroker for a M48 is a pretty solid way to get into a shooter mauser-pattern rifle.
Got a yugo so it would be a good way to get a German looking mauser without it being a actual german one. M48's are cool but I wanted a specific look not just a mauser pattern, I still plan to find a good 1903 and that would have been a better mauser pattern for me since 30-06 is so prolific with no corrosion to worry about.
 
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There out there. Just gotta put the time in. These ended in the last 45 days.
Gunbroker is a fast way for me to turn a 500 dollar gun into a 660 dollar gun. And I've already got a grudge against the site because of how many boomers screw me out of a deal because they look it up on gunbroker just to see it's being sold for 400 than what I'm asking as a deal.
 
Got a yugo so it would be a good way to get a German looking mauser without it being a actual german one. M48's are cool but I wanted a specific look not just a mauser pattern, I still plan to find a good 1903 and that would have been a better mauser pattern for me since 30-06 is so prolific with no corrosion to worry about.
If ya thought Mauser rifles liked to crack stocks, just wait till you see a M1903 that doesn't have a two bolt stock. 03's loves to crack stocks.
Also the solution to corrosive ammo is just water soaked patches. Not as bad as you think to clean out corrosive ammo.
 
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