Has anyone got any contacts in Oberndorf? I have a pre war hunting rifle that I am hoping to identify and hope that you all might be able to help. The details are as follows. Bolt action magazine fed.22LR serial number 46476 markings: 'MAUSER-WERKE A.G. OBENDORF A.N.' The A in A.N. Is very small and may be an R on left of reciever 'PATRONE.22 LONG RIFLE' left side of rear sight 'DRPDRGM' right side of rear sight PROOF MARKS '459' FLOWER with a U underneath CROWN with a B CROWN with a G on barrel and reciever ON TOP OF BARREL 'Heinr.
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Fettkotler, Osnabruk' front sight blade is removable by spring loaded plunger and the rear of the forsight ramp is checkered barrel 575mm to front of reciever and is 14mm at the muzzle. Sling mount 225mm from muzzle rear sight marked for 30 to 200 M and windage adjustable stock is 745mm oa with hand cut checker around the grip and a logo which looks like a wheel with a mauser mark inside it stamped onto the butt. No barrel bands are present and there are no grooves in the hand guard any ideas.
Product Name and Description SKU Price 22 LR; 95% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 24' barrel, The front sight is a blade on a ramp, and the rear is an elevation adjustable tangent. The receiver is grooved for a scope mounts. D15421 $1,995.00 11 mm; 60% blue, poor bore, poor stock, 31 1/2' barrel, Mis-matched. It has a broken stock just behind the tangs.
Manufactured by the Prussian Armory at Spandau in 1888. Metal work has overall turned brown., s/n 55xx C39669 $295.00 8x57Js; 75% blue, very good bore, fair stock, 24' barrel, The front sight is a ramped and hooded beaded blade, The rear sight is two blade flip up item. The barrel is marked serial number - 8,0 N.
Z37515 $1,495.00 8 X 60; 90% blue, excellent bore, very good stock, 24' barrel, All numbers matching. Tangent sight to 200 meters.
Sling swivels. 13-1/2' pull with Noshoc pad., s/n 1106xx D15194 $2,695.00 8 mm; 95% blue, very good bore, good stock, 29' barrel, 98 Mauser action barreled up with a heavy profile barrel for ammunition pressure testing. The receiver is unmarked except for a crossed swords stamp on the right side of. A7664 $1,495.00 8mm; 90% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 30' barrel, The front sight is a draft adjustable blade. The rear sight is a elevation adjustable ladder style.
The bolt is a non numbers matching to the rifle. C39119 $595.00 6.5 X 55mm; 97% blue, excellent bore, excellent stock, 24' barrel, Custom built on a Mauser obendorf B action. Stock and buttplate are Mauser.
Unmarked custom barrel 6.5 SWISS. The receiver is fitted with a Diopter sight marked L.H. Z37510 $2,495.00 9,3x62; 95% blue, very good bore, good stock, 24' barrel, The front sight is ramped and hooded post. The rear is a elevation adjustable unit.
The barrel is marked M.WIDFORSS H.A.B. And 9.3X62 and the serial number. The receiver. Z37529 $4,995.00 8x60; 97% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 24' barrel, The octagon barrel has a matted solid rib, with a ramped beaded front sight, and a sling swivel. The rear sight is an elevation adjustable item.
Z37494 $6,500.00 270 win; 90% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 24' barrel, The barrel has muzzle wear. The front sight is a ramped fixed blade, and a Williams adjustable rear sight. The back of the barrel has the Mauser Trade. Z37478 $1,295.00 7.65 mm; 95% blue, good bore, good stock, 21 3/4' barrel, Matching number except for rear sight and stock. Left side of receiver marked, MAUSER MODELLO 1891 ARGENTINO 1891./DEUTSCHE WAFFEN-UND MUNITIONS FABRIKEN/BERLIN. Barrel has been shortened.
Stock has been stripped. C38924 $275.00 10.6mm; 80% blue, good bore, very good stock, 18 1/2' barrel, Waffenbrik Mauser Oberndorf/Neckar address stamped on the rear flat of the half-round/half-octagon barrel. 6-shot cylinder. German style ramp front sight with matted top and 2-leaf, one standing, rear sight. C38743 $24,995.00 8x57Js; 90% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 24' barrel, The barrel is half Oct/Round with a ramped bead sight on a solid matted rib. The rear sight is a three leaf flip sight. The finish is slightly thinning.
Z37441 $2,495.00 7.65 X 53; 95% blue, very good bore, good stock, 23' barrel, Matching numbers on receiver, bolt, trigger group. Crisp shiney bore.
Top of receiver marked with Argentine crest and F.M.A.P/MAUSER MOD 1909 and DIRECCION GENERAL DE/FABRICACIONES MILITARES, on left. C37989 $995.00 8mm; 85% blue, good bore, very good stock, 18' barrel, Carbine has a Persian cartouche on the top of the receiver, and farsi numbers. Serial number translates to 2369239.
Barrel and receiver has wear on the high edges. C37807 $895.00 7.92 X 57; 95% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 25' barrel, Very minor handling marks or ding overall. Barrel has a hooded front sight. And a CAG ZF 41 scope. The serial numbers match including the scope mount. C37801 $5,396.00 7.63 Mauser; 97% blue, good bore, very good stock, 11.75' barrel, Mauser C96 Early large ring transitional carbine. Has a tapered barrel with a short ramped serrated sight base and hooded front sight, with a bead insert.
C30672 $14,500.00 22 LR; 85% blue, very good bore, good stock, 26' barrel, BARREL HAS PATINA. THE STOCK HAS SLING SWIVELS, AND HAS HANDLING MARKS AND DINGS, s/n 1646xx C37456 $895.00 8x57IS; 97% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 29' barrel, s/n P 70xx Z35290 $1,195.00 8x57IS; 97% blue, very good bore, very good stock, 29' barrel, Iranian contract.
Bright original finish on metal & wood. Matching bolt & stock (Farsi).
Proper bayonet does not match., s/n 003xx C Z35296 $1,495.00.
Well, your right, it is hard to identify without seeing it or knowing the marking on it. Which is why I asked for a place where I could do research instead of asking someone to identify it.
But since you seem to know a lot about this type of thing I will list all the markings that I can from the gun. Receiver Markings: Mauser Werke A.G.
Oberndorf G.(?)N. 187148 Barrel Markings: Patrone.22 long Rifle 187148 There are a couple of little(VERY LITTLE) symbols stamped on the barrel and recievers but I can't really see them too well and certainly can't reproduce them on this keyboard.I really don't have a way of posting a picture, at least now at this time. It is a single shot,the sights are completely adjustable in several ways. The ramp has yardage graduations marked from 30 yards to 200 yards.(I assume its yards, probably Km actually) And the whole sight assemble can be slid about half way down the barrel and is also marked, however I'm not clear on how to use these markings. As far as whether or not it is a military style rifle or not, I'm not sure what it takes to be a military style.
It really is a very nice gun and without a doubt the most accurate gun of any type that I have ever shot. I was hoping to find a place where I could read up on guns of this type and learn as much about it as possible. As rare as it seems to be I really didn't expect anyone to know anything specific about it. But it seems you do,so thank you very much. Edited February 17, 2004 by longbeard. On a military style rifle, the forend wood will be nearly long enough to reach the muzzle, with a metal nosecap. If you've ever seen a military U.S.
Springfield 1903 or a German Mauser Model 998, or a Russian Mosin/Nagant M91, you can readily compare their appearance to your.22 rifle. The commercial versions of the Mauser have a half stock, which leaves much of the barrel exposed. Older.22 bolt-action single-shot Mausers include the following models: EB300 EI320 DSM34 (a military lookalike training rifle) EL320 EN310 ES340 & ES340B. ES350 & ES350B. KKW (another military-style trainer) Except for the EB300 and EI320, your description pretty much fits any of the others.'
B' models were improved versions of the regular ES340 and ES350, introduced in 1935. The 'Mauser Werke A.G.' Designation did not appear until May of 1922. Thus, your.22 was made between 1922 and 1944.
Additionally, their first.22 single-shot rifle was introduced in 1923. So we've narrowed the time span to about 21 years. Unfortunately, your barrel markings don't include a model designation. The serial number (matching on barrel and receiver ok ) is no help. The tiny marks are probably proof marks.
Does your rifle have a manual safety? How does it operate? This would narrow the possibilities a bit. Barrel length and weight of the rifle would also be clues to the specific model. The barrel length is 26 1/2 ' and the overall weight of the rifle is approximatly 8 lb.' S The stock does NOT go nearly to the muzzle, it stops 14' before the end of barrel.
The safety is a three position safety mounted on the rear end of the bolt. I've seen this type of safety on many mausers. I also noticed another stamping on the right side of the barrel that I overlooked. It is: DRP DRGM. I appreciate your help.
The dimensions and safety indicate it's a Model ES340B or ES350B. Is the stock checkered (that is, are the pistol grip and forend carved with areas of tiny diamonds to prevent hands slipping on the stock.I apologise if you already knew this!)?
Mauser Rifles Usa
If it's checkered, it's probably an ES350B.or a 340B somebody checkered! The 340B seems to have had a plain, smooth stock. As far as the condition, it had a little surface rust on the barrel nearly 30 years ago when it was given to me, but it hasn't really gotten any worse. The stock has two marks on the left side that I just don't know about. In a way it looks as if they were put there intentionally, but I'm not sure. Could just be some sort of damage.
I'm pleased to hear its worth a few dollars, but to be honest, its worth far, far more than that to me. Its something that I'm really proud to own, not just because of what it is, but mostly because of what my grandfather was able to do with it. I wish I could learn more about that part of it, but the NRA doesn't keep records of things like that,(not back then anyway),and I can't get in touch with anyone from that side of my family. So,I got what I got. I'd sure like to have those medals back!
This article is about the bolt-action rifle. For the semi-automatic pistol, see. 24 Type Place of origin Czechoslovakia Service history Used by See Wars and others Production history Designed 1924 Manufacturer Produced 1924–1942 Specifications Weight 4.2 kilograms (9.2 lb) Length 1,100 millimetres (43.3 in) length 590 millimetres (23.23 in), Bolt-action Feed system 5-round internal box, two-row, integral box, with quickly detachable floorplate Sights The vz. 24 rifle is a bolt-action carbine designed and produced in from 1924 to 1942.
It was developed from the German Mauser line, and features a very similar bolt design. The rifle was designed in Czechoslovakia shortly after, to replace the, itself a Czech-designed derivative of the Gewehr 98. 24 featured a 600 mm (23.6') barrel which was shorter and considered more handy than the 150 mm (5.9') -longer Gewehr 98. 24 was chambered in like its predecessors.
Throughout the late 1920s and into the 1930s, Czechoslovakia exported hundreds of thousands of vz. 24 rifles to various countries across the globe, with variants chambered in the original 7.92 mm, and. These included contracts for several South American countries, most of which were 7 mm or 7.65 mm guns.
Around 40,000 rifles were sent to Spanish Republican forces during the. Nearly 200,000 rifles were purchased by China, seeing action in the, which became part of. Iran purchased vz. 24 rifles, along with two other variants, through the late 1920s and 1930s, and later produced their own copies in the late 1940s.
Germany acquired hundreds of thousands of the rifles in 1939 when they occupied Czechoslovakia and pressed them into service under the designation 'Gewehr 24(t)'; during the occupation, production of the rifles continued until 1942, when the factories were converted to the German-designed. During this period, several hundred thousand rifles were also built for the. 24 rifles saw extensive service during World War II in multiple theaters, predominantly with the German and Romanian armies on the. Lithuanian vz. 24s, which had been captured during the German invasion in 1941, were later seized by Soviet forces, who in turn used them to arm the during the in the 1960s. Front sight Export and foreign combat employment Many countries purchased the vz.
24 rifle in various calibers. Between 1928 and 1938, the purchased 101,000 vz. 24 rifles, which were chambered in 7.65×53mm Argentine. These rifles were used against Paraguay during the in the 1930s, and many of them were captured by the Paraguayan Army, which in turn used them against Bolivia. Colombia ordered 10,000 rifles between 1929 and 1937 and Venezuela purchased an unknown number of rifles in 1930; both countries' rifles were chambered in 7 mm.
In 1932, Brazilian revolutionaries ordered 15,000 rifles, which were built with bent bolt handles. Peru ordered 5,000 rifles chambered in 7 mm in 1934, and Ecuador purchased 30,000 rifles in 7.92 mm in 1936. Guatemala and El Salvador ordered 4,000 and 300 7.92 mm rifles in 1937, respectively, and Nicaragua purchased 1,000 7 mm rifles that year.
Also in 1937, Uruguay ordered 6,000 rifles in 7 mm, of which 2,000 were vz. 32/Modelo 1932 variants, which were essentially lightened vz. Several European countries also acquired the rifle, all in the 7.92 mm caliber. The Lithuanian Army acquired the vz. 24 in the 1930s, and many of these rifles were captured by German forces during before falling into the hands of the Soviet Army later in the war. Some of these rifles were then sent to to arm the, and some were captured a third time by American forces during the. Yugoslavia purchased 40,000 rifles in 1926, all of which came from Czechoslovak Army stockpiles, and a further 10,000+ between 1928 and 1930.
These rifles saw action during World War II during the in April 1941, as well as during the ' insurgency against the German occupation. In 1935, Latvia traded surplus rifles for 15,000 vz.
24s; Brno Arms Works in turn sold the Lee–Enfields to Iraq. During World War II, Latvian resistance fighters employed the vz. 24s that had been ordered by the Latvian Army against the German occupation forces.
24 also saw action in the by the Catalan Republican troops. About 40,000 vz. 24s were bought by the from Czechoslovakia to be sent to the Spanish Civil War. 24s were shipped from on 1 March 1938, along with other material ( tanks and 76 mm French field artillery). The French freighter, which carried all the material, managed to get the weapons to Bordeaux from where they were sent by land across the border to. Despite arriving late in the war, the vz.
24 was used in Catalonia and the Mediterranean coast of the and saw action in the, where the vz. 24 showed good results despite the Francoist-Nationalist victory. After the defeat of the, Generalissimo kept the rifles that survived the battle until 1959, when they were sold to. Starting in 1927, the Chinese Nationalist government began ordering rifles, and by 1937 had purchased 195,000 vz. They saw action during the in the late 1930s and many of these rifles were captured by Japanese forces. They were then used to arm five infantry divisions stationed in China. After the war, Japan surrendered the rifles to China, which were then issued to Nationalist forces for use during the.
Dragon nest sea download link. China manufactured a copy of the vz. 24 that featured a shorter barrel and a side folding. Japan also ordered 40,000 rifles for the in 1938. German G24(t) After the occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, the Germans took existing stocks of the vz.24 into service under the designation Gewehr 24(t) ('t' being the national origin designator tschechoslowakisch, the German word for 'Czechoslovak'; such national origin designators were German practice for all foreign weapons taken into service). The G24(t) rifles manufactured after the German occupation were completed to a modified design to adhere to German standards. This included changes to the butt stock, with slots cut to fit German slings and the installation of the disc and hollow rod assembly that allowed soldiers to disassemble their bolts.
Brno continued production of the rifle, which progressively gained some K98k features as stocks of pre-war components were used up. The original flat butt plate was replaced with the cupped butt plate of the K98k type, and the walnut stocks were replaced with easier to produce laminate versions. In 1942, the production line at the plant was converted entirely to building K98k rifles and the main plant in Brno was similarly converted the following year.
Over the course of 1941 and 1942, a total between 255,000 and 330,000 G24(t) rifles were built before production switched over to the K98ks. The G24(t) rifles did not receive the old Czechoslovak stampings, and instead only bore standard army proof marks and Waffenamt inspection codes. Romanian-contract vz. 24 showing the serial number prefaced with the 'XR' code In the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Romanian Army decided to adopt the vz. 24 rifle as its standard infantry rifle, though it had not acquired enough weapons to fully arm its troops by the time the country entered World War II in 1941. The first orders for the vz.
24 rifles were placed in 1938 after the German invasion. Romanian-contract vz. 24s have a two-letter prefix at the start of the serial number, the first letter being variable and the second 'R' to designate Romania. Each initial letter denotes manufacturing blocks of 25,000 rifles.
24s 'AR', 'BR', 'CR' through 'YR' represent different periods of manufacturing, though several blocks have not been reported, including 'IR', 'JR', 'KR', 'MR', 'NR', 'QR', 'VR', and 'ZR'. Over the course of the contract, the Czechs manufactured between 400,000 and 750,000 Romanian vz. The first two years of production included royal crests for the, though rifles built from 1940 onward do not feature crests, and many of the surviving early rifles have had their crests ground off. Romania was for much of World War II, from 1941 to 1944.
24s saw action in Ukraine, Bessarabia, and in particularly heavy fighting. It was not until 1944, after significant defeats at the hands of the Soviet, that. Iranian Berno In 1929, Iran ordered 30,000 vz. 24 rifles chambered in 7.92 mm, all of which came from Czechoslovak Army stocks. A further order for 240,000 rifles was placed in 1930, though these were for the vz.98/29 variant with a longer barrel; another order for 30,000 vz. 98/29 'musketon' rifles was placed at the same time. Like several other countries' orders, the initial contract for the 30,000 vz.
24s came from Czechoslovak Army stocks, while the later orders for the vz. 98/29 variants were new production guns. The total order was not completed before Czechoslovakia was conquered by Germany. The 'musketon' rifles were designated as the Model 30 carbine, and in the late 1940s, Czechoslovakia assisted the Iranians with setting up a factory to manufacture their own license-built copies, the Model 49 carbine. The rifles, which were referred to as 'Brnos' or 'Bernos', after their city of manufacture, proved to be prized by Iran's various tribal groups, which frequently rebelled against the government of the. After was deposed in 1941 by the, significant numbers of the rifles fell into the hands of tribal rebels, and they were used in tribal conflicts throughout the 1950s. During the Anglo-Soviet occupation, the Soviets seized and distributed 10,000 of the Brnos to Kurdish tribes in western Iran, which they also helped to train.
The Kurdish force proved to be the basis of the. ^ Ball, pp. 111–112.
^ Walter, p. 319. Grant, p. 19. Ball, pp.
113, 115–116. ^ Ball, pp. 115–116. ^ Ball, p. 121. Ball, p. 118.
^ Ball, p. 116. Ball, pp. 57, 59. Ball, pp.
105, 123. Ball, pp. 68–69.
^ Ball, p. 123. Ball, pp. Filme eu tu e eles download chrome. 116, 118.
^ Ball, p. 122. Ball, p.
246. Ball, pp.
81–82. Ball, p. 93. Ball, p. 99. ^ Ball, pp.
226–227. ^ Grant, p. 61.
^ Law, p. 179.
Walter, p. 315.
Ball, p. 305. Zabecki, p. 638. Ball, pp. 282–286.
Khosronejad, p. 212. Koohi-Kamali, p. 111. Jowett, Philip (2016).
Modern African Wars (5): The Nigerian-Biafran War 1967-70. Oxford: Press. References. Ball, Robert W. Mauser Military Rifles of the World. Iola: Gun Digest Books.
Grant, Neil (2015). Mauser Military Rifles. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. Khosronejad, Pedram (2011).
Art and Material Culture of Iranian Shi'ism: Iconography and Religious Devotion in Shi'i Islam. Koohi-Kamali, Farideh (2003). The Political Development of the Kurds in Iran: Pastoral Nationalism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Law, Richard D.
Backbone of the Wehrmacht: The German K98k Rifle, 1934–1945. Cobourg: Collector Grade Publications. Walter, John (2006). Rifles of the World. Iola: Krause Publications. Zabecki, David T. World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia.
Military History of the United States. Abdington-on-Thames: Routledge. External links.
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