A look at the inside of the Bock Mauser. It is interesting that the rifle has it own serial number and that there is another serial number that all the small parts are matched to. But then the stock is number to the gun and not to the steel parts.

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A look at the inside of the Bock Mauser. It is interesting that the rifle has it own serial number and that there is another serial number that all the small parts are matched to. But then the stock is number to the gun and not to the steel parts.
A German sniper with C.P. Goerz 3x scope and carrying case. Circa 1914-16.
Newly acquired BCD 1943 Kar98k
الصورة تعود لعام 1945. للبنادق الألمانية التي تم الاستيلاء عليها خلال الحرب العالمية الثانية وهذه البنادق هي من نوع Mauser 98k ، النرويج
Karabiner 98 Kurz, back bone of the Wehrmacht.
This K98k was one of many rifle which served with the German army on the Eastern Front during World War 2. It was then surrendered to the Soviet Union along with millions of other like it. The Russian would rebuild them and set them into storage for a future World War, which thankfully did not happen.
So, being a "Russian Captor 98k," it has all the hallmarks, the plum color extractor, mismatched parts, and missing captor screws which I have replaced. It is was produced by Mauser, barrel code "byf" in 1942 and over all in great shape. Considering how hard and moreover expensive German K98k have gotten over the years, I'am happy to have it.
Former federal agents fear the potential for other would-be assassins to seek out widely available, decades-old firearms that require only b