I pretty much stick to rifles with matching bolts and stocks. Depending on price or rarity, I can be convinced to take one with some minor mismatched parts, but not a mismatched stock or bolt. Many of them have been through hell. At what point do you draw the line? Complete mismatch, RC, etc.? It is not that I frown on any of them. I just recognize that I have X number of dollars to spend and cannot purchase every rifle that I encounter. The more original (and matching) the more interesting to me. The more original (and matching) the better they serve as an investment. I could break my own rule regarding matching major components, but if I did it, it would either be a bargain-priced rifle I knew I would flip or something so rare that I would be lucky to find it in any trim (e.g. the virtually unknown 1936 bsw). I have very little self control when it comes to buying German used rifles from WW2. I have to have some way to keep myself in check.
But if your not buying it to sell what difference does it make most I have seen the bolt has been pencil in to match the stock does that make it less desirable ?
Just because its missed matched does not necessarily mean it wasn't done by the Germans towards the end of the war everything was different hell they were running out of everything , not to say I wouldn't like to have a nice matching but just dont like to hear thats junk or not a real rifle I know some of you understand.
Just because its missed matched does not necessarily mean it wasn't done by the Germans towards the end of the war everything was different hell they were running out of everything , not to say I wouldn't like to have a nice matching but just dont like to hear thats junk or not a real rifle I know some of you understand.
Good advise but I not trying to get there approval just trying understand there way of thinking there approval means nothing to me I am very happy with what I have . Rick
I honestly wonder about the "why" of bolt mismatches.
Conventional wisdom seems to be that the bolts were pulled out and thrown on one pile while the rifles went on another at the time of surrender. The reasoning being that the rifles were rendered at least temporarily unusable.
Okay. I kind of get that what with the rumors of "Werewolf" and armed resistance at the end of the war.
However, any surrender footage or pictures that I have seen do NOT show the surrendering troops extracting bolts. They lay their rifle down in the pile with the bolt still in the rifle-- some unlocked, but most locked.
It's all very mysterious . . .
And I'll tell you what, the bolt on my 1938 byf bring-home is NOT a very good match, mechanically.
On the other hand, but-for the serial number difference the bolt in my RC capture might have been made for that rifle. Of course, I understand that the Russians meant to use them operationally or to send them to "client" states at some point, whereas a GI just wanted a souvenir, but it's another one of those anomalies.
I'm not sure if I have an ethos yet. I just like milsurp weapons. The more authentic/original the better, but each has a story to tell.![]()