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  1. #1
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    My New K98

    A very good friend of mine gave me this K98 last week. It is a byf 43. When he gave it to me it had a scope mounted in the rear site base. I removed that scope and I am now waiting for him to locate the scope box because it has the original spring, pin and site bar that was removed to mount the scope. All numbers seem to match except the bolt. The bolt is matching to itself but not the rifle. The cleaning rod is broken. The bore is mint.

    My buddy put a Post War Yugo Sling on it. I may look for an original sling and a mint K98 Bayonet.

    My friend is 64 years old and he got this rifle from a vet back in his 20s. It was a bring back by the vet.

    Here it is:

















    Last edited by md66948; 10-19-19 at 07:00.

  2. #2
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    I am no K98 expert, but this looks good.

    Just yesterday I was looking at a number of WWII bringback K98s in our state military museum. One guy had donated a K98 and a G43 that had what appeared to be unfinished stocks. The documents said they were made in the original factory but assembled after the war, which I assume should have been in Bavaria or the Czech area. They also had a shiny buttpad like your new K98.

    My bringback is a 40. Nothing is shiny on it, including the bitter pad.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by HardToHandle View Post
    They also had a shiny buttpad like your new K98.

    My bringback is a 40. Nothing is shiny on it, including the bitter pad.
    If you’re referring to the cupped/wraparound buttplate, it was added at some point in production (don’t remember the specific year) to provide better protection for the stock. Forgotten Weapons has a good video on different production year rifles.
    RLTW

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  4. #4
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    Nice to have friends like that .

  5. #5
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    K98k.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by 1168 View Post
    If you’re referring to the cupped/wraparound butt plate, it was added at some point in production (don’t remember the specific year) to provide better protection for the stock. Forgotten Weapons has a good video on different production year rifles.
    The Cup Butt Plates were used on the Laminated Stocks. The cupping around the end of the stock would stop the stock from de-laminating.

  7. #7
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    I have been wanting a K98K from the Mauser factory. I admittedly have not been looking very hard but this may change that after the new year. Need to stop my procrastinating.

    OP, very nice rifle!
    ETC (SW/AW), USN (1998-2008)
    CVN-65, USS Enterprise

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by hotrodder636 View Post
    I have been wanting a K98K from the Mauser factory. I admittedly have not been looking very hard but this may change that after the new year. Need to stop my procrastinating.

    OP, very nice rifle!
    I say go for it! They're not getting any cheaper and man are they a blast! My LGS has a yugo K98 with the later stock, I wouldn't hate getting it to hang out with my german rifle. I'd almost attempt on mounting a zeiss scope to the yugo if it shoots nice.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by md66948 View Post
    The Cup Butt Plates were used on the Laminated Stocks. The cupping around the end of the stock would stop the stock from de-laminating.
    Congrats on a nice rifle. The cupped butt plates were a time related upgrade, around 1940 for most of the makers. While most stocks from then on were red or white glue laminate, walnut was used from time to time until the end of the war. I have an all matching byf 42 in walnut. Mauser even briefly used elm in 1943, a very beautifully grained stock.

    Please don’t sand the stock or use anything abrasive on the metal. So many nice milsurps have been ruined this way.
    Last edited by MAUSER202; 12-02-19 at 03:22.

  10. #10
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    Do you plan on shooting your new to you Mauser?
    Train 2 Win

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